Current Usage of Traditional Chinese Medicine for Breast Cancer—A Narrative Approach to the Experiences of Women with Breast Cancer in Australia—A Pilot Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
The Participants
3. Results
3.1. Control
“L”—“Just recommendation from friends who knew other people who had had cancer”.
“C”—“My husband had a friend whose wife had been diagnosed twelve months previously. She recommended an acupuncturist/Chinese herbalist”.
“B”—“A friend of mine recommended this Doctor of “TCM, so I looked him up and there was a lot of information on the internet about him and cancer treatment”.
“K”—“On the advice of my oncologist I started acupuncture and have been going regularly, weekly when first diagnosed. When I was having radiation they said people having acupuncture have a much easier time and I tolerated it well”.
“F”—“It was quite painful for me to do a lot of things—I lost my pectoral muscles so my shoulders would dislocate while I slept. I wasn’t able to help my husband at work, because I couldn’t hold anything. Due to my other chronic health issues a reconstruction was out of the question and I gave up using prosthesis due to skin rashes. After having my ovaries removed and being very slim I put on 15 kg so yes it had an impact in that way”.
“H”—“Maybe it is psychological, but I think you are doing something to help yourself by having TCM treatment. The acupuncture treatments were to prevent the cancer coming back and to keep me healthier”.
“B”—“The whole cancer experience was traumatic, it is a huge shock, maybe a wake-up call. I don’t have such a high-powered job now”.
“N”—“I am not willing to put up with a lot of the stresses I used to put up with. I make sure I have time to rest and time for me. Before I would put my health last, but I don’t put work ahead of me anymore”.
3.2. Relieving
“N”—“I really enjoy my treatment time. I find it relaxing and meditative to have some ‘me’ time away from the normal stresses”.
“C”—“I felt it was a great help to get me through chemotherapy and to deal with illness-related stress. My practitioner initially strengthened my immune system and then helped to relieve side-effects of chemotherapy, including nausea”.
“D”—“My acupuncture practitioner was a lot more encouraging than the doctors. Honestly, if I didn’t have the acupuncture and Chinese herbs it would be a lot more stressful for me”.
“A”—“It has made a dramatic improvement with side-effects of ‘tamoxifen’ such as nausea, hot flashes, and night sweats as well as my sleep”.
“F”—“I had acupuncture to help with hot flashes and night sweats. It definitely helped, and if these symptoms come back I have acupuncture and it completely goes away. I feel more balanced in what I do, I just feel better. I have found it very effective”.
“G”—“With my lymphoedema, I had acupuncture if my arm was beginning to ache. The practitioner worked on getting feeling back in the arm. My sternum was hypersensitive too and the oncologist offered me a drug for that! I used acupuncture and Qigong and there has been really quite substantial benefit”.
“E”—“I didn’t have a terrible time on chemotherapy. I felt that compared to other’s experience I tolerated it well. My white blood cell count remained strong throughout, my energy levels didn’t drop too dramatically, and I felt my strength return relatively quickly after treatment”.
“H”—“I just compared myself to others at the chemo ward. The nurses would say that I was the healthiest-looing chemo patient they ever had. I didn’t have any nausea, my blood count remained good throughout. During the whole treatment I was well, I didn’t lose a lot of weight, I went to the gym twice a week during radiation treatment”.
“E”—“When my blood count was getting low my TCM doctor told me what to eat. After the second blood test my red blood cell count had gone up significantly”.
3.3. Connecting
“D”—“I found my TCM doctor definitely looks at the emotional side of things and was helpful as someone to talk to. He was more encouraging than the other doctors about moving forward”.
“E”—“My TCM doctor made me comfortable and it felt a bit like therapy as well as treatment—counselling therapy, because we would talk. It was a marked difference to the chemotherapy suite at the hospital”.
“K”—“I discovered Qigong at a retreat and found it to be absolutely wonderful”.
“G”—“I was lucky to find someone who teaches medical Qigong. I do this meridian breathing and it’s really powerful for my energy”.
“H”—“Everything should be provided with the oncologist and radiologist—it makes more sense to integrate—the TCM doctor, massage, the naturopath—it should be together and done together, because you are trying to make someone better. Germany is the classic case, they all work together there”.
“E”—“I feel like I suffered a little bit, by being caught between two worlds. The conflict of points of view, the whole kind of evidence debate, the scenario where there are not enough studies to support and to argue in an absolutely convincing way with the oncologist what I wanted to do—where it can be proven and backed up with scientific evidence. I feel that the acupuncture did support me and it was the bare minimum of what the oncologist would allow and I feel that it takes a bit of strength to pursue beyond that”.
“G”—“He (the oncologist) just rolled his eyes when I told him about the herbs. They were ok about it. He said it would be different if I was having chemotherapy because you don’t want anything that interferes with that or would be counterproductive to what they are doing”
3.4. Constraints in Using TCM
“B”—“I continued treatment with acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine for 18 months. The cost was huge, it was on the other side of town so the time and financial constraint had a bearing on stopping”.
“I”—“I am able to claim on my private health fund. With cancer treatment everything is expensive, you just find the money”.
“L”—“I haven’t been for three weeks. I’ve run out of time, as I have gone back to work and have two children. It’s probably more the logistics of getting there after work”.
“K”—“Absolutely no limitations. Benefits are paid from my private health fund, no problem getting to appointments”.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- What impact did your diagnosis have on your Quality of Life?Probe—Physical, spiritual/emotional, financial, work/home life
- Had you used TCM before you were diagnosed?
- If you hadn’t used it before, how did you find out about TCM?
- How did your experience with breast cancer lead to use of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM)?Probe—At what stage did you use TCM?
- Did you use any other complementary therapies?
- What type of TCM therapies did you seek/receive?
- What do you experience as the benefits/limitations of TCM therapies?Probe—Tell me a little more about it?
- Did you experience any barriers to using TCM?Probe—Time, distance, financial?
- What reaction did you receive from your doctors that you were using TCM?
- How did you experience interactions with the different practitioners you have been involved with and how important have these been for your experience of having cancer?Probe—What did you think or feel about?
- What advice would you give someone, newly diagnosed with breast cancer, based on your experience?
- Do you have any other thoughts about breast cancer you would like to share?
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Research Participant | Age at Diagnosis | Current Age | Marital Status | Type of Cancer | Treatment | Special Characteristics or Circumstances |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | 52 | 58 | De-facto | DCIS | Mastectomy, lymph node removal, chemo, tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors | |
B | 44 | 52 | Single with dependants | DCIS/EBC | Mastectomy, lymph node removal, chemo, radio, tamoxifen | Frozen shoulder from radiation treatment, breast reconstruction which had to be re-done |
C | 56 | 58 | Married with dependants | Lobular Carcinoma in Situ | Mastectomy, chemo, radio, lymph node removal, femara | Other breast removed year later and reconstruction |
D | 49 | 53 | Single | EBC | Lumpectomy, lymph nodes removed, radio, aromatase inhibitors | |
E | 44 | 47 | Married with dependants | DCIS/EBC | Mastectomy, chemo, radio, tamoxifen | |
F | 44 | 55 | Married with dependants | EBC, Grade 4, invasive | Bilateral mastectomy, lymph node removal, ovaries removed | Frozen shoulder, health complicated by long-term lupus & thyroidectomy |
G | 50 | 51 | Married with dependants | Infiltrating DC x 2, Grade 2 | Mastectomy, lymph node removal, radiation, tamoxifen, femara | Secondary cancer in sternum and spine |
J | 58 | 62 | Married | EBC | Mastectomy, lymph node removal, chemo, tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors, femara | |
K | 64 | 67 | EBC | Wide local excision, lymph node removal, chemo, radio, tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors | ||
L | 38 | 39 | Married with dependants | EBC Stage 3 | Surgery, chemo, radio, tamoxifen | 22 weeks pregnant when diagnosed, ovaries removed at a later date |
M | 60 | 70 | Single | DCIS | Lumpectomy, lymph node removal, radio, tamoxifen | |
N | 43 | 46 | Married | EBC | Lumpectomy, lymph node removal, chemo, radio, tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors | Frozen shoulder caused by radiation treatment |
Modality Used | Number of Patients | Percentage of Patients |
---|---|---|
Acupuncture | 13 | 100% |
Chinese Herbal Medicine | 8 | 62% |
Qigong | 3 | 23% |
Diet Therapy | 3 | 23% |
Patients Concerns | Number of Patients | Percentage of Patients |
---|---|---|
Stress and coping | 9 | 69% |
Fatigue | 7 | 54% |
General well-being | 5 | 38% |
Adjuvant therapy side-effects | 5 | 38% |
Chemotherapy side-effects | 4 | 31% |
Radiation side-effects | 4 | 31% |
Hot Flushes | 4 | 31% |
Pain | 3 | 23% |
Boost immunity | 2 | 15% |
Insomnia | 2 | 15% |
Night sweats | 2 | 15% |
Prevent recurrence | 1 | 8% |
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Porter, D.; Cochrane, S.; Zhu, X. Current Usage of Traditional Chinese Medicine for Breast Cancer—A Narrative Approach to the Experiences of Women with Breast Cancer in Australia—A Pilot Study. Medicines 2017, 4, 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicines4020020
Porter D, Cochrane S, Zhu X. Current Usage of Traditional Chinese Medicine for Breast Cancer—A Narrative Approach to the Experiences of Women with Breast Cancer in Australia—A Pilot Study. Medicines. 2017; 4(2):20. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicines4020020
Chicago/Turabian StylePorter, Dianna, Suzanne Cochrane, and Xiaoshu Zhu. 2017. "Current Usage of Traditional Chinese Medicine for Breast Cancer—A Narrative Approach to the Experiences of Women with Breast Cancer in Australia—A Pilot Study" Medicines 4, no. 2: 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicines4020020
APA StylePorter, D., Cochrane, S., & Zhu, X. (2017). Current Usage of Traditional Chinese Medicine for Breast Cancer—A Narrative Approach to the Experiences of Women with Breast Cancer in Australia—A Pilot Study. Medicines, 4(2), 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicines4020020