Weekly Round-Up

Time for this week’s round-up of the best blog posts I’ve read over the past week. These posts have moved me, taught me something, inspired me, and I’ve wanted to share them with you. Don’t forget that if you have written a post you want readers to see, just leave a comment below.
Barbara‘s latest post is a declaration of independence to live life on her own terms after a lifetime spent trying to meet the expectations of others.
Jennifer shares a podcast interview.
Audrey is enjoying some summer vibes.
Gabby is celebrating a milestone birthday.
Terri has information on a new product for drain management during breast reconstruction.
Janet is pondering the question of how much information is enough? Or too much? when it comes to cancer.
Loved Carolyn‘s post on what can go wrong with patient engagement. See also Chris‘s thoughts on patient partnership.
A helpful guide to understanding your pathology report on the SBC blog.
OurMBCLife shares an ASCO2023 takeaway on chemo-brain.
Should mastectomies be classified as amputations? asks Nancy this week.
A treatment update from Sarah.
As Pride month draws to a close, Abigail shares her thoughts on what it means to her
We are all different human beings and deserve to live our lives without interference from others.
Words to live by for all of us.
Until next week,
Yours with much love always
Marie xxx
Hello dear Marie – thank you for including my post on what can go wrong with patient engagement (based on a fascinating new Canadian study (Dawn Richards, PhD et al: (Reflections on Patient Engagement by Patient Partners: How it Can Go Wrong”).
When patient partnerships work, they work very well. But when they go wrong. . .
Take care. ♥
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I read that excellent paper last week and was delighted to see you covering it also.
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