Additional Resources
Over a quarter of a million women will hear the diagnosis of breast cancer every year, and breast cancer will kill about forty thousand women each year. Naturally, when faced with this news, women will variously experience fear, shock, sadness, disbelief or other feelings of psychosocial distress.
In Meeting Psychosocial Needs of Women with Breast Cancer, the National Cancer Policy Board of the Institute of Medicine examines the psychological consequences of the cancer experience. The report focuses specifically on breast cancer in women because this group has the largest survivor population (over two million) and is the most extensively studied cancer from the standpoint of psychological effects. The report:
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