John – Interview 09
John was diagnosed with colorectal cancer in 1993. He received surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy, and then extensive surgery for a duodenal ulcer in 1999.
John was diagnosed with bowel cancer 17 years ago. He received surgery, which removed a large part of the large bowel, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy following surgery which resulted in the breaking down of blood vessels in his stomach. He also had major duodenal ulcer surgery which left him with more problems due to the extent of the surgery and the change to his bowel habits. The surgery left him with continuous diarrhoea due to the lack of sphincter muscles. He has taken drugs regularly for 17 years to control his diarrhoea, and has to make sure he is near to a toilet or learn to use facilities when they are available. It’s something he has to live with for the rest of his life. His eating habits have had to change, and he now eats small amounts regularly to control the passage of food through his body.
John and his family received very little help with physical or psychological effects of the surgery from the oncology department of the hospital that performed the surgery. He mostly got information from a friend who was a nurse and got a lot of information through books and magazines.
John has more recently developed Type 2 diabetes, which is a bigger issue for him nowadays than the cancer.
He was happy at the end of regular hospital follow-up, as the cancer was behind him and he could move on. He and his wife can relate to other people with cancer and try to be positive about his recovery. Other people with cancer sometimes ask them about his experience and he is happy to talk to them. He thinks that a positive attitude was one of the factors that got him through. Having had cancer has reinforced and strengthened the strong bond he has with his wife and sons. It also changed his priorities and he and his wife decided to do things that they might have otherwise put off.
He thinks of himself as cancer recovered’ instead of cancer survivor’ as it’s a more positive phrase. His main message for other people with cancer is positive thinking’.