Cancer rates in women are increasing, and the side-effects of cancer diagnosis and treatment often result in complex and prolonged difficulties. Yet frustratingly, there is little access to holistic or ongoing support for women after treatment.
Compounding these difficulties, cancer communities speak often of an agonising sense of loneliness, with one in four cancer patients known to feel they lack support which severely affects their ability to cope.
From a young age, I saw this first-hand. A family member was diagnosed with cancer, and I was witness to the difficult impact it had on their body, spirit, confidence and relationships, and yet no one really talked about it. I learned how shocking and difficult it can be, especially without holistic or psychological care, for the person diagnosed and their relatives.
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Mainstream cancer care services tend to fixate on duration of life over quality of life, and this is reflected in the rise of mental health issues and long-term physical challenges among cancer patients that are partnered with feelings of constant worry.
Despite Public Health England acknowledging cancer as a long-term health condition, around 75% of people in the UK are left unsupported after their treatment finishes. Physical activity is known to be a ‘wonderdrug’ in this post-treatment context, yet very few physical activity initiatives are available or accessible to the cancer community.
Research shows physical activity, and by association dance, is beneficial at all stages of cancer and treatment. People who are physically active are better prepared for cancer treatment (prehabilitation), respond better to treatment (symptom control), recover more quickly following treatment (rehabilitation), are more likely to maintain a sense of wellbeing (health management), reduce their chances of cancer recurrence (prevention), and have improved quality of life (even in palliative care).