Thursday 7 May 2015

My Bowel Cancer One Page Profile:

This was originally posted on the Connect4Life blog: http://connect4life.blogspot.co.uk/2015/05/one-page-profiles-for-long-term.html: thought I would share it here too!

One page profiles are a simple way that people with long term health conditions can tell our story and express our preferences.
They have a starkly simple format: They have just 3 questions:
  • What people like and admire about me.
  • What is important to me
  • How to support me well.
Max Neill, who works with Connect4Life as a community connector has just written a one page profile to share with his family, friends, workmates and health professionals involved in supporting him with his cancer.

He said "Last September I was diagnosed with bowel cancer and had an emergency operation followed by precautionary chemotherapy. In the last few weeks a scan revealed that despite the chemo, the cancer has metastasised, with new growths on my peritoneum and lymph. Obviously this means that I have a lot further to go on my cancer journey, but as well as being a cancer patient, I'm also a family man, a Connect4Life worker and someone who enjoys a game of Dungeons and Dragons!"

"I decided to write a one page profile for a few reasons. I thought it would be a good way to gather my thoughts together at a stressful time and express my wishes clearly. I'm going to see my oncologist again next week to discuss my options, and I wanted her to know that I want to do what I can to work towards a cure. I'll share it with people like my ostomy nurse and the district nurses who've been supporting me with my chemo, and the staff at the Rosemere Unit."

"I'm hoping that it will be a way to avoid having to answer the same questions over and over again!
I like the one page profile because it is so simple, yet it enables you to say so much. It avoids all the medical jargon, and it helps you have the important conversations you need to have at a time like this, both while you're making it, and while you're sharing it."

"It's too easy in a big busy healthcare system for your identity to be subsumed by your diagnosis. I want to use my one page profile so that who I am comes off the page, and I'm recognised as a person with my own priorities and my own hopes and fears. I think a tool like this would be useful to so many people, why shouldn't every cancer patient be helped to write a One Page Profile?"



You can find out more about One Page Profiles by following the links below:

This is a blog with one hundred examples of One Page Profiles being used in many different ways:
https://onepageprofiles.wordpress.com/

Here's a blog advocating the use of One Page Profiles with Older People living with cancer: http://opaalcopa.org.uk/tag/one-page-profiles/

Here's Amanda's One Page Profile written around her breast cancer: http://thinkaboutyourlifeandhealth.com/2013/06/28/using-one-page-profiles-to-direct-cancer-support-amandas-story/

The Learning Community for Person Centred Practices have shared many examples of One Page Profiles: http://www.learningcommunity.us/onepageprofiles.htm

Here's a blog showing how One Page Profiles can be used in personalising health services:
http://personalisinghealth.com/tag/one-page-profiles/

Think About Your Life offers a whole range of thinking resources to people living with cancer, including a template for a One Page Profile: http://www.thinkaboutyourlife.org/

You can also get in touch with Connect4Life!

Follow us on twitter: @C4LifeLancs

'Like' us on facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Connect4LifeLancs

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