Incorporating 12-step program concepts into cancer survivorship

The fact that the term “cancer survivorship” is now part of our vocabulary is a testimony to advances made in management of these diseases.  Most cancer survivors, however, are not unscathed by the experience.  As I tell my patients, they won’t be entirely as they were before treatment.  How these issues are dealt with varies from person to person.  But, awareness that chronic problems may persist long after treatments end signals that even though we’ve won the battle, the war is not necessarily over.  We may need to address problems in the physical, mental/emotional and/or spiritual spheres.  After all, quality is as important as quantity.

Certainly, health care professionals are well trained to deal with physical issues.  Attempting to address the totality of needs in an organized manner is a recent phenomenon.  Certainly, in thinking about programs that have been successful in supporting people mentally, emotionally and spiritually, 12-step programs come to mind.  the steps are compelling as they are for anyone affected by the disease alcoholism, including the alcoholic (A.A.) and the “caregiver” (Al-Anon).  Substitute “cancer” for “alcoholism.”  The value of the steps is that they provide a guideline through the process of recovery.  In fact, I prefer the designation “recovery” over “survivorship” as it implies an ongoing process with relapses and remissions along the way.

At first glance, the verbiage doesn’t seem to be appropriate.  But, the steps suggest four primary ideas:

  • “We Are Powerless Over the Problem of Alcoholism.”  This notion of powerlessness is difficult for healthcare professionals, especially physicians, to accept.  The intention is that we as individuals have no ability to change attitudes and behaviors of others, but we do have control over ourselves.  Think the Serenity Prayer:

God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, Courage to change the things I can, And the wisdom to know the difference.

In fact, this is a very empowering concept that releases each of us from worrying about issues that don’t concern us and address our energies to our own lives.

  • “We Can Turn Our Lives Over to a Power Greater than Ourselves.”  Many find the idea of a Higher Power difficult to embrace, while others already believe in a Power greater than themselves, but feel that “God has deserted” them.  Both viewpoints hinder recovery as they tend to foster a victim mentality.  Personally, I dislike the designation “cancer victim” for this reason.

The slogan:  “Let Go and Let God” can also be very liberating, recognizing that The Higher Power is in charge of our lives and we are not victims.  The 11th Step provides details:

Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that out.

  • “We Need to Change Both Our Attitude and Our Actions.”  Both the cancer and its treatments can  result in distorted thinking.  Some are left with severe fatigue and pain; others with long-lasting memory deficits called chemobrain.  Anxiety and depression are not uncommon.  The possibility of recurrence is always present.  Some become angry and blame their situation on others.  Obviously, these behaviors can be self-destructive and ruin relationships.  In these difficult situations, a useful tool in 12-step programs is sponsorship.  Having someone who has lived through similar circumstances and recovered always there for support and guidance is crucial for recovery.
  • “We Keep the Gifts We’ve Received by Sharing Them with Others.”  Probably the most important concept.  Several studies have shown that participation in cancer support groups improves outcomes.  But many patients still are reticent to join.  Some prefer the privacy of one-on-one sessions with a therapist.  On the other hand, they lose the personal experiences of people who have experienced what they’re experiencing.  One compromise is to have a mentor or sponsor who has personal knowledge of the treatment guide the patient and family through the process.

For this reason, 12-step programs rigidly subscribe to anonymity to encourage participation in meetings and sharing experiences with others.  The most important item in the success of these programs has not been identified, but several reports have suggested sharing at meetings as the major one.

I’m thrilled that we’re talking about cancer survivorship these days.  The fact that more people are living longer is very gratifying.  Therefore, formally addressing quality of life issues is the logical next step.  Incorporating 12-step program concepts into cancer survivorship programs, proven successful in other diseases, merits serious consideration.

Richard Just is an oncologist who blogs at @JustOncology.

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  • http://twitter.com/spookiewon Pjay (Patti) Pender

    I have found your site immensely informative, but I must respectfully disagree with you on this issue. Nothing could more fully cement the “victim mentality” than the idea of a “higher power.”  As a cancer survivor myself, if I for one minute believed there was an omnipotent god or “higher power” who either gave me cancer or allowed me to get cancer he could have prevented, I certainly wouldn’t consider “turning my life over” to this clearly malevolent being.  The only acceptable answer to cancer is “Shit happens.  It’s not personal.”  Certainly working toward the serenity that accepts what you cannot change, courage to change what you can, and wisdom to know which is which fosters better outcomes, but the idea that I need to ask an obviously malevolent being to “grant” these to me seems the ultimate victim mentality.  I’ll take these for myself!  *That’s* how you overcome the victim mentality!  That there is a great deal of controversy as to how effective these 12 step programs are even in fighting addiction, it seems ill advised to extend this to cancer treatment as well.

    I respect that there are those who find the concepts of god and religion to be comforting in times of crisis, but I put my “faith” in science.  Randall Munroe (XKCD) put it better than I ever could when he said: ”So, has [cancer] opened [me] up to looking for answers beyond science?  …no.  Not really.  We’ve groped for comfort before the slings and arrows of fortune for millennia, and I begrudge nobody their sources of solace.  But science provides *tools*.  $100 billion a year in scientific studies and medical R&D has bought us some pretty damned powerful slings and arrows of our own.  This world is amazing, and I’m going to live to experience more of it thanks to people who refused to gracefully accept the ineffability of reality.  I find my courage where I can, but I take my weapons from science.  Because they *work*, bitches.”

    • Anonymous

      I am an oncologist who has never had cancer but who has cared for cancer patients for 30 years.  I am also, for want of a better term, an atheist who believes that AA saved his life.  The most difficult aspect for me in accepting the process rather the verbiage of the program is understanding the phrase, “God as we understood him”.  This phrase is not meant to imply that one must be “born again” or even believe in any God as such, but that there are events in our lives and aspects of this life that cannot be controlled or  and perhaps never explained by science.  It is the concept that “letting go” is the realization that we have only limited power to control many events in this life and that our attempts to maintain that elusive control often only lead to distraction, frustration and discontentment. 

      Furthermore, just because I describe myself as an atheist does not mean  I deny the existance of “spirituality”.  I remain in awe of this life, even those aspects that science explains completely.  As the saying that I once heard in a meeting goes, “Religion is for people who are afraid of going to hell. Spirituality is for people who have been there.”  Such is often the case for the cancer survivor.

      Certainly 12 step programs are not a panacea and are not for everyone, but for some of us  they have been transformative.  I commend Dr. Just for his thoughts and think they deserve further consideration.

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