Logo Carenity
Logo Carenity
Join now! Log in
flag en
flag fr flag es flag de flag it flag us
Home

Forums

Latest discussions
General discussions
See all - Forum index from A to Z

Conditions

Fact sheets
See all - Disease index from A to Z

Magazine

Our featured pieces
News
Testimonials
Nutrition
Advice
Procedures & paperwork

Medications

Medications fact sheet
See all - Medication index from A to Z

Surveys

Ongoing surveys
The results of the surveys

Join now! Log in
  • Forums

    • Latest discussions
    • General discussions
    • See all - Forum index from A to Z
  • Conditions

    • Fact sheets
    • See all - Disease index from A to Z
  • Magazine

    • Our featured pieces
    • News
    • Testimonials
    • Nutrition
    • Advice
    • Procedures & paperwork
  • Medications

    • Medications fact sheet
    • See all - Medication index from A to Z
  • Surveys

    • Ongoing surveys
    • The results of the surveys
  • Home
  • Forums
  • General forums
  • Living with cancer
  • Telling patients to 'fight' cancer puts them under pressure
 Back
Living with cancer

Telling patients to 'fight' cancer puts them under pressure

  •  138 views
  •  15 times supported
  •  14 comments

avatar JosephineO

JosephineO

Community manager
04/10/2018 at 14:34

Good advisor

avatar JosephineO

JosephineO

Community manager

Last activity on 15/07/2024 at 09:21

Joined in 2018


989 comments posted | 41 in the Living with cancer group

6 of their responses were helpful to members


Rewards

  • Good Advisor

  • Contributor

  • Committed

  • Explorer

  • Evaluator

  • Friend


 View profileView  Add a friendAdd  Write

Cancer patients should not be told to “fight” their disease because doing so puts them under “exhausting pressure”, Macmillan Cancer Support has said.

cancer

The charity warned that framing cancer in terms of a battle leaves patients feeling guilty for admitting fear and often prevents them planning properly for their death.

Macmillan said thousands of sufferers were unnecessarily dying in hospital rather than their own home each year because of a “gulf in communication” towards the end of life.

Experts last night called for a cultural change around cancer so patients no longer feel compelled to put on a brave face.

Research commissioned by the charity reveals nearly two thirds of sufferers never talk to anyone about their fears of dying due to the pressure to see themself as a “fighter”.

Meanwhile 28 per cent reported feelings of guilt if they cannot stay positive about their disease.

Adrienne Betteley, end-of-life care advisor at Macmillan, said: “We know that “battling” against cancer can help some people remain upbeat about their disease, but for others the effort of keeping up a brave face is exhausting and unhelpful in the long-term."

The report said the pressure to stay positive and support people to “fight” cancer was one of the biggest barriers to holding conversations about dying, even in patients who had already received a terminal diagnosis.

“We need to let people define their own experiences without using language that might create a barrier to vital conversations about dying,” said Ms Betteley.

“For health and social care professionals, there is often a fear that the person is not ready to talk about dying.

“We know, however, that making plans while receiving treatment allows people with cancer to retain a sense of control during an emotionally turbulent time.”

What do you think about this? Do you think it is time to change the language surrounding cancer? Many people on Twitter talked about how you "don't lose a battle against a heart attack" so why do we use this language with cancer?

Follow

Other groups...

All things Christmas
Carenity News
Feedback for Carenity
Fun and games
Good to know
How to use Carenity
Let's talk about COVID-19
Life beyond illness
News from the media
Procedures and Paperwork
Youth patients with chronic conditions

Give your opinion

Survey

What do you think about the Carenity Forum and community?

Survey

How do you use Carenity? Share your experience!

All comments

Go to the last comment

avatar JosephineO

JosephineO

Community manager
05/10/2018 at 10:15

Good advisor

avatar JosephineO

JosephineO

Community manager

Last activity on 15/07/2024 at 09:21

Joined in 2018


989 comments posted | 41 in the Living with cancer group

6 of their responses were helpful to members


Rewards

  • Good Advisor

  • Contributor

  • Committed

  • Explorer

  • Evaluator

  • Friend


 View profileView  Add a friendAdd  Write

@maddoglady‍ @robjmckinney‍ @Paulineashort‍ @Waterford48‍ @masoka‍ @Skator‍ @Margaret1‍ @DianaFM‍ @iamised‍ @Jellag‍ @Rosha43‍ @Nicnocnoo‍ @DianaFM‍ @Oldenglish1‍ @mikesalmons‍ @Dee237‍ @AngieHall‍ @Beagle01‍ @Marney‍ 

Hello everyone,

I hope you don't mind me tagging you in this post. I just wanted to draw your attention to this interesting article and get your opinions about it!

See the signature

Josephine, Community Manager


Telling patients to 'fight' cancer puts them under pressure https://www.carenity.co.uk/forum/other-discussions/living-with-cancer/telling-patients-to-fight-cancer-puts-them-under-pressure-2578 2018-10-05 10:15:59

avatar robjmckinney

robjmckinney

Ambassador
05/10/2018 at 11:39

Good advisor

avatar robjmckinney

robjmckinney

Ambassador

Last activity on 04/07/2025 at 09:51

Joined in 2015


627 comments posted | 41 in the Living with cancer group

59 of their responses were helpful to members


Rewards

  • Good Advisor

  • Contributor

  • Messenger

  • Committed

  • Explorer

  • Evaluator


 View profileView  Add a friendAdd  Write

My brother fought right to the end not believing this was the end. A young inexperienced Doctor finally said there was nothing they could do, he lost all hope and died within two weeks, a broken man. For some people to fight the appalling experience of the treatment they need to fight and be positive as it would break you. Myself I accepted my fate and was at peace whatever the outcome. I had a killer cancer and my brother had a cancer that people can live a normal life in most cases. Everyone is different and fight their battle their own way. But the treatment is so terrible, a positive mindset would good for the individual. The last day of treatment was such a relief yet my cleaners mother is on her sixth treatment, I could have never gone through that, ever. Macmillan I have always found useless, this is opinion nothing more, everyone is an individual. Their fight against cancer is a very personal one and so is the way they deal with it.

See the signature

robjmckinney


Telling patients to 'fight' cancer puts them under pressure https://www.carenity.co.uk/forum/other-discussions/living-with-cancer/telling-patients-to-fight-cancer-puts-them-under-pressure-2578 2018-10-05 11:39:56

avatar JosephineO

JosephineO

Community manager
Edited on 05/10/2018 at 15:06

Good advisor

avatar JosephineO

JosephineO

Community manager

Last activity on 15/07/2024 at 09:21

Joined in 2018


989 comments posted | 41 in the Living with cancer group

6 of their responses were helpful to members


Rewards

  • Good Advisor

  • Contributor

  • Committed

  • Explorer

  • Evaluator

  • Friend


 View profileView  Add a friendAdd  Write

@robjmckinney Thank you for this feedback and sharing your story with us. I thought the article brought forth an interesting perspective but like you said, not one that a lot of cancer patients would agree with...

Do any other members have an opinion? 

See the signature

Josephine, Community Manager


Telling patients to 'fight' cancer puts them under pressure https://www.carenity.co.uk/forum/other-discussions/living-with-cancer/telling-patients-to-fight-cancer-puts-them-under-pressure-2578 2018-10-05 15:06:11

avatar maddoglady

maddoglady

07/10/2018 at 15:08

Good advisor

avatar maddoglady

maddoglady

Last activity on 04/01/2023 at 12:00

Joined in 2016


109 comments posted | 41 in the Living with cancer group

1 of their responses was helpful to members


Rewards

  • Good Advisor

  • Contributor

  • Committed

  • Explorer

  • Evaluator


 View profileView  Add a friendAdd  Write

Firstly let me agree wholeheartedly with Rob's comment about Macmillan. Rob I think you are spot on they are useless!! Again just my opinion! 

I imagine that it was Macmillan that branded cancer treatment as a battle in the first place! 

I've been up against these daft attitudes to cancer treatment from the outset, it's a journey, a battle, an odyssey a voyage, no it's not it's a disease and everybody's experience of that disease will be very different. Giving it these sexy titles which sound good as a soundbyte or headline is hugely unhelpful.

Advertising campaigns which show all cancer patients as pale, bald sickly creatures smiling bravely through their tears whilst fighting the good fight make me want to scream!

The treatment is brutal, it will actually kill or might push you into remission if you're lucky. One thing is guaranteed medical professionals will still have no communication skills, you'll still be expected to sit about for hours waiting to be seen for appointments, scans, blood tests and at some point some overweight nurse will pay you on the hand, squeeze your arm or your leg and declare in a voice pitched high enough to break cut glass "There, there dear you're doing ever so well"

I echo Rob's sentiments everyone who is unfortunate enough to have cancer is an individual and how each individual chooses to approach and get through treatment is an individual choice, fight it, journey it makes no difference. Most days I approach it like a wolf with anger issues, some days I don't have the energy!

See the signature

Maddoglady!


Telling patients to 'fight' cancer puts them under pressure https://www.carenity.co.uk/forum/other-discussions/living-with-cancer/telling-patients-to-fight-cancer-puts-them-under-pressure-2578 2018-10-07 15:08:52

avatar JanetteR

JanetteR

08/10/2018 at 13:49

Good advisor

avatar JanetteR

JanetteR

Last activity on 31/03/2025 at 19:36

Joined in 2015


31 comments posted | 5 in the Living with cancer group


Rewards

  • Good Advisor

  • Contributor

  • Committed

  • Explorer


 View profileView  Add a friendAdd  Write

There is a difference between being hopeful for treatment results and 'fighting a battle' - as other responses have shown, we all respond differently and cannot possibly predict from a position of health how we will react when we receive the diagnosis.  It's why patients and relatives should be consulted before such campaigns are designed and issued - not just a group of generic population sample.  

I've met some of the most positive people who had cancer (advanced) but it didn't change their outcome sadly - but I do believe that removing hope and being too blunt, can make some people totally give up and deteriorate rapidly.  Communication skills seem to focus on being clinically pessimistic (fear of litigation?) rather than realistic or citing examples that might help. 

The belief that we will all collapse, need an army of supporters around us and somehow will not benefit if our families are not involved too, is flawed.  Not everyone has a family, not everyone chooses to involve their family as the fallout and stress onto their health can also cause guilt with the patient themselves.  

My surgeon told me that a positive attitude would help but he didn't say it was essential.  I read widely after diagnosis and found some common areas that resonated with me that I followed but these also 'granted permission' for me to be myself, accept that some days are likely to be awful, and I approached it that however bad, tomorrow is another day and all things must pass.  In the start, it was an ordeal getting through the next few minutes, half hour, hour before I progressed to a day and then a week. It took years before I was able to look forward and plan a summer holiday and even now, find long term planning a real difficulty.  That's the legacy of having a cancer from which the majority of patients do not survive and the statistics can be very frightening.  I've also lost too many 'cancer' friends' from the same condition in the last few years so this isn't just statistics - as they all represent people.  However new treatments are being discovered all the time so some people are beating the odds and that gives others hope - I don't believe that should be taken away from people. 

There is a need for cancer charities to raise funds - I get that so tugging on heartstrings may be one way but some of the ways these are portrayed are unhelpful in the extreme. I prefer more recent campaigns acknowledging the patient is a person - father, grandad, friend, mum, daughter, sister, brother, etc - i.e. a person first and condition second.  

Last night I heard a parent of a young person with an allergy state on the radio that the stress of living with that (after the two cases where people have died) is like having PTSD in a warzone.  I think the general catastrophising of language in the media undermines those who genuinely fight battles in warzones or whatever and serves little purpose .  I received an online magazine this week that said some celebrity had devastating news so clicked on the story to find out their pet was ill. I guess it's all relative but a cancer diagnosis should not be as devastating for all cancers - for many there are really good treatments/survival rates but not for others.  Therefore like treatments, messages needs to be more personalised to each case... that takes skill and time - both of which are in short supply in the health service. 


Telling patients to 'fight' cancer puts them under pressure https://www.carenity.co.uk/forum/other-discussions/living-with-cancer/telling-patients-to-fight-cancer-puts-them-under-pressure-2578 2018-10-08 13:49:24
avatar exit

Unregistered member

08/10/2018 at 21:01

I’m not a cancer warrior and I don’t want to be one. It’s a disease and no amount of kale and meditation is going to cure me. I just ride the wave to my own oblivion, sometimes I’m grateful and happy and at other times I’m sad and down. But for while I’m ever this side of the grass I want to live my life an authentic me. 


Telling patients to 'fight' cancer puts them under pressure https://www.carenity.co.uk/forum/other-discussions/living-with-cancer/telling-patients-to-fight-cancer-puts-them-under-pressure-2578 2018-10-08 21:01:49

avatar JosephineO

JosephineO

Community manager
09/10/2018 at 11:35

Good advisor

avatar JosephineO

JosephineO

Community manager

Last activity on 15/07/2024 at 09:21

Joined in 2018


989 comments posted | 41 in the Living with cancer group

6 of their responses were helpful to members


Rewards

  • Good Advisor

  • Contributor

  • Committed

  • Explorer

  • Evaluator

  • Friend


 View profileView  Add a friendAdd  Write

@Lolly66‍ @maddoglady‍  @JanetteR‍ @robjmckinney‍  Thank you all for giving your opinions and expanding on the media influenced image that is portrayed of cancer patients. It is important to have these discussions to educate others on what this disease does entail, rather than what is fed to the masses through advertising campaigns.

See the signature

Josephine, Community Manager


Telling patients to 'fight' cancer puts them under pressure https://www.carenity.co.uk/forum/other-discussions/living-with-cancer/telling-patients-to-fight-cancer-puts-them-under-pressure-2578 2018-10-09 11:35:22

avatar robjmckinney

robjmckinney

Ambassador
09/10/2018 at 13:52

Good advisor

avatar robjmckinney

robjmckinney

Ambassador

Last activity on 04/07/2025 at 09:51

Joined in 2015


627 comments posted | 41 in the Living with cancer group

59 of their responses were helpful to members


Rewards

  • Good Advisor

  • Contributor

  • Messenger

  • Committed

  • Explorer

  • Evaluator


 View profileView  Add a friendAdd  Write

@JosephineO Mass advertising campaigns are there for making money, little else. I used many Charity sites like the British Heart Foundation and MacMillan etc. looking for help.They were all about giving money to their cause rather than informing people who are ill seeking help.

See the signature

robjmckinney


Telling patients to 'fight' cancer puts them under pressure https://www.carenity.co.uk/forum/other-discussions/living-with-cancer/telling-patients-to-fight-cancer-puts-them-under-pressure-2578 2018-10-09 13:52:53
avatar exit

Unregistered member

11/10/2018 at 09:57

Hi, 

I so agree with the comments already aired. I myself have gone through five years of different treatment, and not to long ago wanted to give up this so called fight. When I told my children and the other members of the family. I had such a strong response against it, I felt guilty for even thinking it. I hate the Macmillan adverts that show people with cancer having someone with them all the time, a nurse on their arm etc, it couldn't be further from the truth, as I have found out only a couple of weeks ago. My mum believes those adverts and was shocked to hear me say different.

I don't feel like I am fighting a battle. To me a battle is something you can win, you make your decision and change things and get the better of. I have watched my cancer slowly creep around my body and nothing which has been done has stopped it. I do think the language around cancer should change.

All the best to everyone

Shirley.


Telling patients to 'fight' cancer puts them under pressure https://www.carenity.co.uk/forum/other-discussions/living-with-cancer/telling-patients-to-fight-cancer-puts-them-under-pressure-2578 2018-10-11 09:57:35

avatar JosephineO

JosephineO

Community manager
11/10/2018 at 10:07

Good advisor

avatar JosephineO

JosephineO

Community manager

Last activity on 15/07/2024 at 09:21

Joined in 2018


989 comments posted | 41 in the Living with cancer group

6 of their responses were helpful to members


Rewards

  • Good Advisor

  • Contributor

  • Committed

  • Explorer

  • Evaluator

  • Friend


 View profileView  Add a friendAdd  Write

@Shirley61 Thank you for sharing Shirley emoticon heart

See the signature

Josephine, Community Manager


Telling patients to 'fight' cancer puts them under pressure https://www.carenity.co.uk/forum/other-discussions/living-with-cancer/telling-patients-to-fight-cancer-puts-them-under-pressure-2578 2018-10-11 10:07:36
  • 1
  • 2

Give your opinion

Survey

What do you think about the Carenity Forum and community?

Survey

How do you use Carenity? Share your experience!

Articles to discover...

Sun protection and chronic illnesses: How to stay safe in the sun

05/07/2025 | News

Sun protection and chronic illnesses: How to stay safe in the sun

Screens and the brain: What are the risks of overuse and how can you protect yourself?

28/06/2025 | News

Screens and the brain: What are the risks of overuse and how can you protect yourself?

Women's health: Why is medical research still falling short?

21/06/2025 | News

Women's health: Why is medical research still falling short?

Can you train your brain to feel happier, scientifically?

14/06/2025 | Advice

Can you train your brain to feel happier, scientifically?

NHS - Get help with prescription costs

12/11/2019 | Procedures & paperwork

NHS - Get help with prescription costs

Diclofenac to become a prescription drug

21/01/2015 | News

Diclofenac to become a prescription drug

Opioids Causing Concerns, Problems for Chronic Pain Patients

14/10/2016 | News

Opioids Causing Concerns, Problems for Chronic Pain Patients

Do you have the winter blues?

21/10/2014 | News

Do you have the winter blues?

icon cross

Does this topic interest you?

Join the 500 000 patients registered on our platform, get information on your condition or on that of your family member, and discuss it with the community

Join now! Join now! Join now! Join now! Join now!

It’s free and confidential

Subscribe

You wish to be notified of new comments

 

Your subscription has been taken into account

Join now! Log in

About

  • Who are we?
  • The Carenity team
  • The Science and Ethics Committee
  • Contributors
  • Carenity in the news
  • Certifications and awards
  • Data For Good
  • Our scientific publications
  • Discover our studies
  • Editorial policy
  • Code of conduct
  • Our commitments
  • Legal notice
  • Terms of use
  • Cookies management
  • Contact
  • Carenity for professionals

Quick access

  • Health magazine
  • Search a forum
  • Learn about a condition
  • See medication reviews
  • List of forums (A-Z)
  • List of condition info sheets (A-Z)
  • List of medication fact sheets (A-Z)
  • Language flag fr flag de flag es flag it flag us

The www.carenity.co.uk website does not constitute or replace professional medical advice.