The Stigma
"You have lung cancer. You don't belong here. You gave the disease to yourself!" Those words represent an admonishment bordering on scorn that greeted my first and only in-person cancer support group session. It was fortunately small, populated by ladies, all who had breast cancer.
I smoked; my entire family smoked. I also served as a career US Army officer. I spent months breathing oil fire smoke during the First Gulf War; have instant olfactory recognition of "burn barrel smoke" so prevalent in Army encampments; and lived 9 years in places with high radon gas concentration. I am the only one in my family with lung cancer. Might environmental exposure be my cause?
We are entangled in a culture of blame. Devastation is not bad enough; we are compelled to make it worse by blaming. Then we shame! We do it over and over. To what end? What is solved? Here is one very sad casualty. Many who join our Forum these days are never smokers. Yet they are instantly branded by The Stigma! It starts early. Almost the first question asked by their medical team is: did you smoke? How does the answer change treatment or outcomes?
There is another causality. Blame is a blocker to low-dose CT screening participation, particularly in the US veteran community. Who, after honorable service, wants to submit to a CT scan when the outcome leads to scorn? The chance of doing nothing appears preferable to the limelight of diagnosis.
Even language used to characterize scan eligibility is blame-tinged. Who wants to admit to being a “20-pack year” smoker? No wonder less than 10% of the eligible population actually agree to a low dose scan. One must sign a piece of paper certifying smoking history, and that dresses the stage for blame and shame!
We need to be done with this!
Stay the course.
- Justin1970, ChiMama, BridgetO and 1 other
- 4
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