Monday 2 January 2012

Support and Advice Regarding Brain Cancer


Brain cancer support is a kind of assistance or support provided by various organizations and institutions to brain cancer patients and can be of various forms. Some organizations may arrange for financial support while some others may take initiative in providing non-financial support. Support can also be in the form of brain cancer awareness and needs to be carried out in a systematic manner in order to obtain maximum benefits. 


Significance of Brain Cancer Support

Brain cancer is the most common form of tumor-growth in children and is necessary to be detected in early brain cancer stages in order to undergo thorough brain cancer cure. The disorder records a good survival rate of more than 70% in children under than 19 years of age and the physical as well as mental recovery is also easier in comparison to the cases occurring in adults. In old people (generally above 50 years), brain cancer survival rate is much less and records a highest of mere 30-35% in the initial stages. Also, the chances of survival are less than 10% in the final phases. Early brain cancer diagnosis may help to alter the chances of survival on a positive side and benefit the victim in fast recovery.

Brain cancer support is very essential as well as helpful for such victims and gives an advantage of tackling the disease in a better and systematic manner. Organizations that are involved in providing financial brain cancer support focus on availability of better treatment to patients and also assist them financially in getting better post-cure options. Avoiding brain cancer recurrence is the major aspect to be considered and financial support encourages a victim to opt for competent and advanced detection and cure patterns.

Non-financial support can also play a vital role in supporting a victim in avoiding or tackling brain cancer. Such support mainly focus on creating awareness about the disease and making victims or general public familiar with the latest breakthroughs or research findings obtained by scientific or empirical methods. Brain cancer support groups also play a lead role in arranging workshops and seminars for brain cancer victims and enable proper interaction between victims and cancer experts. Television shows, radio programs and arranging for training sessions for victims or their family members is also an important form of non-financial support for the disorder. Support groups can work on regional or national basis depending upon the scope of their activities. Some support groups are also global in nature.

Support groups can function on various aspects like age, race, form of cancer etc. some support groups focus only on the concerns of children victims suffering from brain cancer while some others may focus on a specific form of race – black or white. The disease is more common in white people and also causes more cancer-deaths in them as compared to black ones. Also, the numbers of cases occurring in women are less as compared to men.


Some of the leading brain cancer support groups American Brain Tumor Association (United States of America), National Cancer Institute (USA), National Brain Tumor Society (USA), Macmillan Cancer Support (United Kingdom), Brain Tumor UK (UK), The New York Brain Tumor Support Group (USA), and NYC Brain Tumor Support Group for Newly Diagnoses Patients (USA).


Brain cancer support should be taken only under proper medical advice and focus should be on minimizing the occurrence or recurrence of the disorder. Analyzing personal medical history plays an important role in opting for an apt support for the disease.    


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1 comment:

  1. Hey! You have such an interesting and informative page. I will be looking forward to visit your page again and for your other posts as well. Thank you for sharing your thoughts about brain tumor support groups. I am glad to stop by your site and know more about brain tumor support group in your area. Keep it up! This is a good read.
    The symptoms are true for ALL types of neoplasm of the brain (including secondary tumors). It is common that a person carry a primary benign neoplasm for several years and have no visible symptoms at all. Many present some vague and intermittent symptoms like headaches and occasional vomiting or weariness, which can be easily mistaken for gastritis or gastroenteritis. It might seem strange that despite having a mass in his skull exercising pressure on the brain the patient feels no pain, but as anyone who has suffered a concussion can attest, pain is felt on the outside of the skull and not in the brain itself. The brain has no nerve sensors in the meninges (outer surface) with which to feel or transmit pain to the brain's pain center; it cannot signal pain without a sensory input. That is why secondary symptoms like those described above should alert doctors to the possible diagnosis of a neoplasm of the brain.
    Please feel free to suggest other resources that we should consider adding to this list by contacting brain tumor support groups

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