Go2 Foundation
Navy Veteran says lung cancer diagnosis and treatment should be ‘stigma-free’
Navy Veteran James Pantelas said he’s faced serious stigma in his life as a cancer survivor. When he was diagnosed with metastatic lung cancer 15 years ago, friends and relatives said: “Well, you knew this was coming.”
Although he quit four years before his diagnosis, Mr. Pantelas had been a smoker. After his diagnosis, one of his stepsons was so angry that they did not speak for a few years. “He thought it was my fault. We’ve since worked that out, but it does have an impact on families,” Mr. Pantelas explained. When he was diagnosed, he also blamed himself.
“I’m not saying that smoking doesn’t cause cancer, it does cause a lot of cancers,” he said—he thought about other potential cancer-causing exposures he’s had.
Mr. Pantelas was exposed to asbestos (which can increase risk of lung cancer) during his Navy service in the 1970s. He also raised pet birds—there is some evidence to suggest that birds’ dander can increase lung cancer risk.
Whether or not a person has several non-smoking risk factors, smoked their whole life, or never smoked, the fact remains, he said: “they should be treated with empathy. “
The idea that someone “brings lung cancer upon themselves,” isn’t backed by science. According to the American Cancer Society, as many as 20% of people in the United States who died from lung cancer in 2018 never smoked. Some studies have shown that the lifetime risk of lung cancer among current smokers is around 11% for women and around 14% for men—so not everyone who smokes develops lung cancer.
The stress of family issues like those experienced by Mr. Pantelas can cause even more health problems. So can the stress of stigma by health care providers, he explained.
I had a doctor say, ‘If I have a patient who tells me they never smoked and they got lung cancer, I just know they’re lying,’” Mr. Pantelas said. That’s why empathy and reduced stigma are important.
Mr. Pantelas, who beat the odds by surviving an aggressive form of cancer for more than a decade, gives a lot of credit to health care providers who are working to decrease stigma.
Dr. Drew Moghanaki, chief of the radiation oncology department at the Atlanta VA Medical Center, is one such provider. Mr. Pantelas said Dr. Moghanaki has worked to make his facility a “stigma free zone.” Those efforts, the Navy Veteran emphasized, are “outstanding.”
Mr. Pantelas intends to continue working to decrease lung cancer stigma alongside the organizations he works with, National Lung Cancer Roundtable, LUNGevity Foundation, and GO2 Foundation for Lung Cancer, which partners with the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). The Office of Community Engagement (OCE), VHA’s partnerships experts, facilitated the partnership with GO2 Foundation and welcomes others interested in improving the health and well-being of Veterans.
For more information on OCE’s partnerships, please visit va.gov/healthpartnerships.
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Posted March 2, 2020