“I Don’t Want My Arm to Blow Up”: Dealing with Post-Breast Cancer Lymphedema

Wearing a night compression garment. Copyright Mei R. Fu. All rights reserved.

“I don’t want my arm to blow up,” says one breast cancer survivor, talking frankly about her struggle to manage post–breast cancer lymphedema.  She’s quoted this month in Part 2 of AJN‘s two-part article on the condition, which is  characterized by an abnormal accumulation of lymph in the arm, shoulder, breast, or chest.  In Part 1 (July), authors Mei Fu and colleagues described its pathophysiology and diagnosis. This month they discuss current approaches to risk reduction, treatment and management, as well as the nursing implications.

Effective risk reduction and management involve several strategies. For example, the authors emphasize the need to

  • prevent infection by performing daily skin care and treating punctures, cuts, abrasions, and insect bites with a topical antibiotic.
  • prevent injury by avoiding injections in the affected area and using caution when cooking.
  • prevent muscle strain by avoiding overuse of the affected arm and wearing a compression garment during strenuous activities.
  • avoid restriction of the affected area by avoiding having blood pressure  measured on the affected arm and wearing loose-fitting clothing and jewelry.
  • avoid excessive heat by avoiding prolonged exposure (as in a sauna or hot tub).
  • promote lymph drainage by elevating the affected arm above the level of the heart for short intervals daily and by engaging in regular, light aerobic exercise.

For the complete list of strategies, see Table 1 in the article. And check out this earlier post on how […]

2016-11-21T13:24:24-05:00August 4th, 2009|nursing perspective, nursing research|0 Comments

Nurse Bloggers Not Afraid to Tackle Health Care Reform

“Nurse Ratched” is a blogger who recently took the initiative and got an interview with former Vermont governor Howard Dean about health care reform. It’s great to see nurses who are helping take citizen journalism to the next level. 

And here’s a very sensible, open-minded post at Florence dot com about the health care system in Canada and whether it’s as frightening and awful as it’s made out to be.  (Hint: she thinks it isn’t. And yes, we just mentioned this blogger in our last post. We’ll stop now!)

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Nurse Whistle-Blowers Pay Heavy Price For Doing the Right Thing

By hellosputnik, via Flickr By hellosputnik, via Flickr

Late Friday afternoon I spoke with Clair Jordan, the executive director of the Texas Nurses Association. Jordan and others at the TNA have been working in support of two Texas nurse whistleblowers, Anne Mitchell and Vicki Galle, who in June were fired from their jobs, arrested, and indicted on third-degree–felony criminal charges, Jordan said. Mitchell and Galle had filed an anonymous complaint with the Texas Medical Board against a physician at their workplace, Winkler County Memorial Hospital, in Kermit, Texas. The nurses believed the physician to have acted in ways that jeopardized patient care; the complaint, in documenting examples of this care, identified patients by their case number. The physician complained; the local sheriff investigated; charges were filed; the nurses lost their jobs. […]

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