Steve – Interview 31
Diagnosed with breast cancer in his right breast in 2010 after consulting for pain in his left breast. He had a mastectomy, but did not need radiotherapy or chemotherapy. He is currently taking tamoxifen.
Steve was having sensitivity and pain in his left nipple area and noticed that there were a couple of lumps there. He went straight to see his GP who referred him for a mammogram immediately after he returned from his holiday. Fortunately, the policy of his local health care authority was to do a bilateral mammogram. When he went back to the consultant for the results a week later he was told that he had breast cancer in his right breast which initially caused him some confusion. The lumps that he had originally consulted for in his left breast had already begun to get better. He could easily see the small pea-sized tumour in his right breast on the mammogram and the ultrasound images. He appreciated the straightforwardness with which he was told that he would need a full mastectomy.
He found his mastectomy remarkably straightforward. Within three or four hours of the operation he was walking around the ward and telling them what he had had done – most of the other patients on the ward that he was on had no idea that men could get breast cancer, although he had been aware of this himself. He experienced very little pain immediately following the mastectomy, although he did experience more pain when he got an infection which made him feel quite unwell for a couple of weeks.
When Steve first started taking tamoxifen he got quite severe hot flushes and night sweats; he felt as if water was pouring out of him. Fortunately, these had settled down by the time he returned to work. He had a phased return to work, allowing himself to get over the extreme fatigue that he felt after his operation and to develop more strength and mobility in his right arm as he recovered from his surgery, because aspects of his work are quite physical.
Steve felt that he had had great support from his breast care nurse and very good treatment at the hospital. He also had good support from family, friends, colleagues and neighbours. The medical staff explained what to expect carefully. However, the way that much of the written information that he found was presented made him feel second-class; because it was so female-orientated. Throughout his surgery and afterwards he collaborated with the medical team so that a series of clinical photographs could be taken to help show other people what to expect when a man has a mastectomy. He wanted to do this because some of the existing images that he found on the internet were horrendous;.