Changes to diet and lifestyle
There is no clear evidence about what people with cancer should eat. Many people with pancreatic cancer change what they eat because to improve their...
Here, people talk about how they communicated with doctors about their pancreatic cancer.
Some people said that communication with their doctors and other staff had been excellent. Doctors had drawn pictures for some people to show them exactly what their surgery would involve. Doctors had spoken in a way that they could understand (also see ‘Finding information’).
However, communication wasn’t always good. For example, some people weren’t told they had cancer. They only found out when they were referred to a cancer hospital or met a Macmillan nurse. William did not understand that a ‘growth’ in his pancreas was life threatening. The next day a junior doctor commented that he had a ‘terminal condition’ and William was alarmed(see ‘Hearing the diagnosis and prognosis’).
People said that doctors sometimes use medical terms that they don’t understand. A doctor told Saba that her mother had ‘metastases’ in her liver. Saba didn’t realise that this meant that the cancer had spread from another part of the body and was unlikely to be cured.
Richard was told by a surgeon that he had pancreatic cancer. The surgeon only spoke about the surgery and not what would actually happen to him. Anthony appreciated the way his wife’s consultant explained the facts but it was the nurses who gave emotional support. He wished he knew this earlier.
Bob thought that sometimes his doctors were busy and this made communication difficult.
Sometimes communication was bad because there was no continuity of care. In other words, people saw a different doctor every time they went to the clinic. One man thought that things went wrong because the doctors and nurses were busy and he thought that the hospital was ‘in chaos’. Another man said that weekends were particularly difficult because he would see other staff who were not part of the regular team and they had different opinions.
Continuity of care may also be an issue when people are being cared for at home. When Simon’s wife, Karen, was dying at home he said her care was excellent. But the GP, hospice and the community health care team didn’t communicate well. The situation was worse at weekends when Karen saw an out-hours doctor who didn’t have notes about her.
When people are very ill or dying it can be hard for doctors to know whether or not their patients want to know the prognosis. Some people stay positive about a recovery even when the situation is very bad. They may not want bad news or to talk about death and dying.
However, some people want to know the truth and get upset when they get unclear or information. Some people said that doctors and nurses didn’t want to give them bad news. One day a doctor told Peter that he didn’t have cancer but he might need surgery to remove small tumours from his pancreas. The next day another consultant told him that he had a large neuroendocrine tumour which was ‘totally inoperable’ and that the outlook was bad.
Another man received conflicting information from members of the team. A nurse told him that his treatment (chemoradiotherapy) was being given as a ‘cure’, but the specialist said this was not the case.
William wanted to know what would happen if his cancer came back after he had finished the chemotherapy. He felt that he had to ask the right questions to get an honest answer.
John’s wife, Ann, died from pancreatic cancer. Her doctors didn’t tell them that the situation was ‘desperately bad’. John understood that it was hard for doctors to tell them that Ann was dying but he wished he had been told what would happen.
There is no clear evidence about what people with cancer should eat. Many people with pancreatic cancer change what they eat because to improve their...
We spoke to people who had pancreatic cancer about the care they had. People were keen to praise the care they had in the NHS...