clearly, services for mental health are necessary from the time of a cancer diagnosis, dr. corinna seliger-behme, a neurologist at germany’s heidelberg university and a co-author of the study,
told the new york times.
“probably, we can prevent suicide if we talk about it, and if we really start that early,” she said.
the other study, also published march 28 in
nature, looked at 460,000 people in britain who had been diagnosed with cancer between 1998 and 2020. they looked at people with 26 different cancers, and screened for five psychiatric illnesses — depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and personality disorders — that had been diagnosed after their cancer.
they found that depression was the most common of these illnesses, with anxiety close behind. they also found that self-harm was most likely in people with brain tumours, prostate cancer, hodgkin’s lymphoma, testicular cancer and melanoma.
it can often be hard for both patients and doctors to focus on or even recognize mental illness in the face of a cancer diagnosis, researchers said.
“cancer management often overshadows the recognition and treatment of psychiatric disorders,” the study said. “patients with preexisting mental health conditions may be prone to relapse during their cancer journey, whereas individuals without a history of mental health may face competing demands from their cancer that could distract physicians from recognizing and diagnosing psychiatric disorders.”