Health Magazine

Men and the Stress of a Spouse Or Partner’s Breast Cancer

Posted on the 12 August 2012 by Jean Campbell

menA new Canadian research study, published in the July edition of Oncology Nursing Forum, finds that men married to or partners of women with breast cancer don’t usually choose support groups to cope with their stress.

Instead, the men in the study shared that they chose exercising or hanging out with friends as preferred methods of coping.

The study asked men in Edmonton and Saskatoon to answer questions about how they dealt with their partners’ breast cancer.

Wendy Duggleby, endowed nursing research chairwoman in aging and quality of life at the University of Alberta, said in a journal news release, “There are many programs out there for women, but for men a lot of support mechanisms are support groups, and it was very clear from the participants in our study that’s not what they wanted.

What these men needed was help finding ways to do things for themselves to help reduce their stress.”

Duggleby continued, “If their husbands lose hope, the wives are really, really worried about them and they often lose hope themselves. For women with breast cancer, it actually helps with their own quality of life if we can do something to help the men. It’s very interconnected.”

The surveys  found that men had difficulty going to medical appointments with their partners due to work schedules.

“If you’re a working man, it becomes difficult to go to some appointments, although some of that is just perception,” Duggleby said. “They’re not being excluded but they feel like they’re being excluded. It’s part of breaking down some of those barriers in cancer care.”

“One way to help men in these situations is to provide guides about where to find information, Duggleby said.”They really do want something that’s specific for them, tailored for their needs. It doesn’t have to be done through a research study,” she said.”There is a lot that can be done just based on what these men said and the ideas they provided. It would make a huge, huge difference.”

More information

SOURCE: University of Alberta, news release, July 31, 2012


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