Help for Caregivers
Frequently Asked Questions
OPA Cancer Charity is dedicated to supporting patients, families and their caregivers – when preparing for, undergoing, and surviving after surgery for oesophageal/gastric cancer.
Our meetings and publications, including a bi-annual newsletter and downloadable resources from our website, aim to provide valuable information that may support patients and their caregivers after treatment for these type of cancers. We have free information resources that are available for reading or downloading on our website. Alternatively, you can request a hard copy by placing an order through the OPA Shop.
We also operate a Helpline for Patients, Caregivers & their families on 0121 704 9860, to help direct you to the most relevant sources of specialist advice.
We provide a range of resources tailored to carers, including information on the patient’s care, access to support groups, as well as our Notes for a Carer booklet. We also offer a helpline for immediate assistance, where we can put you in touch with a Carer Buddy.
Our website and publications include comprehensive guides on oesophageal and gastric cancer, outlining the diagnosis process, treatment options, and expected outcomes. You can also attend our support meetings or reach out for more personalised information.
Yes, we host support groups for both patients and carers. These groups provide an opportunity to connect with others who are going through similar experiences, offering emotional support and practical advice.
Please view our clinical trials page here, where you will find more information.
Publications
A Guide to Life After Oesophageal/Gastric Surgery.
We hope this booklet may be helpful for carers as well as for patients who are preparing to undergo, or who have undergone, this major surgical operation. It gives a general overview of the nature of the surgery itself, of post-operative recovery, and then of the possible or likely changes to a patient’s general lifestyle – especially to the inevitable changes to eating and drinking – and also to some of the associated problems that may arise.
Swallowing & Nutrition – when it’s difficult.
This booklet goes into greater detail concerning some of the complications around eating and general nutrition that may arise after the operation. It covers issues around the effects of having radiation or chemotherapy, of possibly later having to have a stent fitted, and the complications that may arise with certain foods in these circumstances. It also gives quite detailed advice about balancing the diet of a post-operative patient in the longer term, paying attention to energy, protein, and vitamin and mineral requirements, with sections on simple foods that are especially nutritious, and on food supplements that can be beneficial. Finally it gives advice on some of the problems that can occasionally arise, such as indigestion, nausea, diarrhoea, or loss of appetite.
Recipes for When Food is a Problem.
This is a recipe book with various food ideas for people who need to put on weight, have difficulty in swallowing, or who are living with the after-effects of surgery on the stomach and/or oesophagus (gullet).
Oesophagogastric Cancer – The Patient’s Pathway.
This booklet is a pathway guide for patients following diagnosis. It is based on the St Thomas’ Hospital (London) pathway but as the treatment is standardised across the UK, it should reflect that in the centre where you are treated.
Notes for a Carer
Caring for a cancer sufferer or survivor is not a time-limited commitment, for which patience, understanding, empathy and warmth are indispensable qualities that can enhance the sufferer or survivor’s quality of life. This booklet offers useful advice, information and encouragement to those shouldering the role of carer, including related websites for working carers and – thanks to Age UK’s research and information services – advice on claiming Carer’s Allowances and Attendance Allowance, and on purchasing a subsidised bed wedge for elevating head and torso in bed.
Being a Caregiver
Being a caregiver is a commitment, one might also say a job, without a fixed definition – and often, unfortunately, without extra financial support. Not unlike some aspects of the role of doctor or nurse, here it means focussing on the recovery, survival and well-being of your partner or friend. They may need your support and help after such a life event that a diagnosis of serious or life-threatening ill-health has brought about.
In the role of caregiver it is important not to underestimate anxieties or worries which your partner or friend may have on occasions where fresh complications, or a new pain, arises; worries that the cancer could, or has, returned. After treatment for cancer, every such occurrence can trigger these worries, and therefore if such a new pain or complication arises, it is advisable to make an appointment with the doctor or specialist nurse to have it looked into as soon as possible. (Avoid – as I am sure you will have learnt – well-meaning reassurances that ‘don’t worry just now’, or ‘it will get better soon’, etc.)
As your partner or friend, and possibly you yourself, will also have learnt from the doctors and nurses after the operation and treatment, there are many possible side-effects and consequences of treatment for oesophageal/gastric cancer, and several of these are explained in our booklet described, ‘A Guide to Life After …’. It is always recommended that you try to be present at any subsequent follow-up consultations of your partner or friend with their consultant or specialist nurse. You may have helped them prepare for the consultation, making notes for what they, or you yourself, wish to report or discuss. If they are anxious or distressed, you can give extra support, and possibly take notes on the comments and advice that the consultant or specialist nurse gives.
If the patient needs to see their GP in an emergency, please remember that – with the responsibilities that GPs carry to cover the conditions of every one of their surgery’s patients – the GP may not be fully familiar with the very particular nature of complications arising from oesophageal/gastric cancer. A visit to that GP may therefore be only the initial step for a further referral to the local consultant or specialist nurse.
After the operation, it is possible that some swallowing difficulties may develop again, and its is important to report these as soon as possible. All that may be needed is a ‘stretch’ under endoscopy. Other more common consequences of the treatment are ‘Dumping syndrome’, ‘Steatorrhea (malabsorption)’ and ‘SIBO (small intestinal bacterial overgrowth)’.
Resources
Websites
Several other excellent sources and resources for carers which can offer assistance might be of interest:
Macmillan Forum Page
More generally, the website ‘Macmillan.org.uk’ offers very useful information and advice on many aspects of oesophageal cancer, its treatments and survival in a 135-page booklet, which is available in PDF format, downloadable, and also as a CD.
Carersuk.org offers an online forum of people who may well have experienced what you, as a carer, are going through. It can be reassuring to hear others’ stories and opinions, and to share yours with them.
Carers Direct is an NHS helpline on 0300 123 1053, for anyone needing help with their caring role, and with discovering what options are available to them. It covers ground similar to those publications and online sources found at Macmillan and Age UK.
Carerstrust is a charity which “works to improve support, services and recognition for anyone living with the challenges of caring, unpaid, for a family member or friend …”. It offers online services, grants in some instances, and a network of independent partners who can assist carers “to get the extra help they need to live their own lives”.
Corecharity.org.uk is a charity which undertakes research on all digestive diseases (gut, liver and pancreas). It also publishes a regular newsletter. If there are children in the family, affected by the parent’s cancer, extra advice is available on the websites ‘Cancer.org’, ‘Cancerresearchuk.org’ as well as on the Macmillan site.
Carers are advised to ask to register as a carer with their local GP surgery as a precautionary measure, in case of an emergency.
Possibilities for financial support for carers
(with thanks to Age UK’s research and information services)
Age UK’s website offers the following in booklet form or as online downloads:
- What is Carer’s Allowance?
- Who can claim Carer’s Allowance?
- How to claim Carer’s Allowance
- Help claiming Carer’s Allowance
- Information for Carers
- Attendance Allowance
What is carer’s allowance?
Carer’s Allowance is the main welfare benefit to help carers. Many people don’t think of themselves as a carer – but if you look after a partner, friend or relative who’d find it difficult to manage without your support, then you’re a carer. You don’t have to be related to the person you care for to claim.
Carer’s Allowance 2024: Rates, Eligibility & How to Apply | Age UK
Age UK has published the following booklets as well, which are also available as online downloads:
- Advice for Carers,
- Carer’s Allowance information guide,
- Carer’s Allowance factsheet,
- A guide to claiming benefits for people over pension age.
Advice for Carers
In accordance with Age UK’s advice “… looks at both the practical side of caring – the benefits you can claim, how to arrange flexible working hours, how to organise respite care – and the emotional side, such as the impact on your health and social life. This may include assistance for you and the person you are caring for from your local council’s Social Services, beginning with a free Carer’s Assessment. It aims to let you know where to go for help, so you don’t feel you have to manage on your own.”
It also gives advice on helping the person you are caring for with their application for benefits to which they may be entitled.
‘More money in your pocket’: a guide to claiming benefits for people over pension age
Age UK’s guide advises… “If you’re 60 or over, you could be entitled to benefits that you haven’t been able to claim before. These can help you keep your independence and improve your standard of living by helping with housing costs, care needs or general day-to-day living expenses … Age UK’s online benefit calculator can help you work out what you may be entitled to ….”. This calculator is straightforward to use, and can help to give initial guidance as to whether you are entitled to claim, and if you are, an idea of the amount.
Carers may also like to look into the possibility of claiming Attendance Allowance for the person for whom they are caring.
Age UK’s guide explains that this allowance is for over-65’s with physical or mental disability, who need help with daily living, and who are not already in receipt of Disability Living Allowance [DLA] or Personal Independence Payment [PIP]. The allowance is tax-free and not means-tested, and available to all who are eligible, regardless of current income or savings.
To apply, they will have needed help for at least the previous six months or, if they are terminally ill, they can make a claim straight away. If they are awarded Attendance Allowance, they may become entitled to other benefits, such as Pension Credit, Housing Benefit, or Council Tax Reduction. www.ageuk.org.uk/
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