WHEN I LEFT Stanford University Medical Center fifteen<br > years ago after treatment for cancer1 wasted no time in<br > charging back into lifeMy one desire was tO put the experi<br > ence behind me<br > But it wasnt long before I discovered that although 1 was<br > cancerfreeI certainly wasnt free of cancerA series of per<br > sonalincidents revealed that there was more tO overcoming<br > this disease than surviving the hardships of treatmentIn<br > steadthe end of treatment marked the beginning of a new<br > and unexpected challengeadapting tO life after cancer<br > Six years ago I started Cancervivea Los Angelesbased<br > nonprofit organization for recovered cancer patientsbecause<br > I realized 1 wasnt alone in the problems I facedSince then<br > I ve heard from thousands of survivors who also find that the<br > struggle against the disease is only half the battleAlthough<br > their doctors advise them tO get back tO work and on with<br > their livesthat isnt always as easy as it sounds<br > On leaving the hospital or outpatient clinicrecovering can<br > cer patients are faced with a bumpy transitional period as<br > they learn tO adjust tO life without the intensive medical sup<br > port they received throughout treatmentDuring this par<br > ticularly vulnerable timesurvivors encounter unanticipated<br > dimculties such as anxiety over ending treatmentdelayed<br > stress reactionsthe fear of recurrenceand a variety of other<br >
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