It has long been recognised that cancer is an extraordinarily culturally charged disease. However, while studies have provided valuable insights into the embodied experience of cancer, far less research exists on cancer patients’ and survivors’ perceptions of the treatments they receive and the meanings they assign to these treatments. This paper focuses specifically on chemotherapy – a highly feared form of treatment that is often popularly depicted to be worse than the experience of cancer itself. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork at a cancer support group in western Canada, this article explores patient perceptions of adjuvant chemotherapy. I argue that a widespread cultural model of chemotherapy exists which emphasises the value of ...
In 1995, two women at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute were given accidental overdoses of chemotherapy a...
Introduction: For a long time patients with cancer receiving chemotherapy were ’captive’, and were c...
Drawing on in-depth interviews with cancer patients, this article examines patients' perspectives on...
Cancer has long been a cultural touchstone: a metaphor of devastation and a spectre of social as wel...
This thesis follows the lives of people who are diagnosed with a cancer that is unlikely to be cured...
Adjuvant chemotherapy is given after surgery for early stage cancer. It aims to cure. Though potenti...
This thesis focuses on the cultural construction of cancer experience in a modern clinical context. ...
The objective of this work was to understand the meaning of the chemotherapy from the patient’s poin...
This thesis is an ethnographic investigation aimed at describing the lived experiences of Thai cance...
ABSTRACT Objective: to analyze the contents and dimensions of social representations about chemothe...
This dissertation explores the question of how the legitimacy of different approaches to healing is...
How do people with cancer occupy places within the health system during their journey through pallia...
OBJECTIVE: this study's aim was to interpret the meanings assigned to quality of life by patients wi...
From folk beliefs about how cancer spreads within the body and why “they” have yet to find a cure fo...
ABSTRACT Objective: To analyze the social representations of chemotherapy and the experiences built...
In 1995, two women at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute were given accidental overdoses of chemotherapy a...
Introduction: For a long time patients with cancer receiving chemotherapy were ’captive’, and were c...
Drawing on in-depth interviews with cancer patients, this article examines patients' perspectives on...
Cancer has long been a cultural touchstone: a metaphor of devastation and a spectre of social as wel...
This thesis follows the lives of people who are diagnosed with a cancer that is unlikely to be cured...
Adjuvant chemotherapy is given after surgery for early stage cancer. It aims to cure. Though potenti...
This thesis focuses on the cultural construction of cancer experience in a modern clinical context. ...
The objective of this work was to understand the meaning of the chemotherapy from the patient’s poin...
This thesis is an ethnographic investigation aimed at describing the lived experiences of Thai cance...
ABSTRACT Objective: to analyze the contents and dimensions of social representations about chemothe...
This dissertation explores the question of how the legitimacy of different approaches to healing is...
How do people with cancer occupy places within the health system during their journey through pallia...
OBJECTIVE: this study's aim was to interpret the meanings assigned to quality of life by patients wi...
From folk beliefs about how cancer spreads within the body and why “they” have yet to find a cure fo...
ABSTRACT Objective: To analyze the social representations of chemotherapy and the experiences built...
In 1995, two women at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute were given accidental overdoses of chemotherapy a...
Introduction: For a long time patients with cancer receiving chemotherapy were ’captive’, and were c...
Drawing on in-depth interviews with cancer patients, this article examines patients' perspectives on...