Hope Unscripted

Ep. 8 - Working While Healing: Navigating Cancer, Career & Survivorship

30 min · 20. maj 2026
episode Ep. 8 - Working While Healing: Navigating Cancer, Career & Survivorship cover

Beskrivelse

A cancer diagnosis changes everything instantly, but the reality for many patients is that professional responsibilities do not simply disappear. Navigating the logistics of intensive medical treatments while maintaining an identity and standing in the workplace creates an immense dual burden. In this episode, we tackle the complex intersection of employment, active treatment, and long-term survivorship. We sit down with Brittney Duke, a retail marketing professional and multi-time cancer survivor, to discuss how professionals can manage their careers while facing life-altering health crises. We get into the specific corporate frameworks and personal choices that allow an employee to stay engaged without burning out. Brittney Duke shares her journey through a bone marrow disorder, leukemia, breast cancer, and colon cancer, offering a rare perspective on what it means to be the CEO of your own health. We break down the impact of formalized corporate programs like the Working with Cancer pledge, the necessity of open communication lines between managers and associates, and the value of small, highly personalized team gestures like peer support groups. Our discussion highlights how a workplace can shift from a source of stress to a pillar of stability and normalcy during extended medical leaves and subsequent returns to the office. The unglamorous truth is that returning to work after treatment is rarely a seamless transition because the person coming back is physically and emotionally changed. Employees often struggle with ongoing fatigue, the pressure to look normal when they do not feel normal, and the exhausting task of constantly fighting health insurance companies for pre-authorizations. Viewers will walk away with a clear understanding of why strict corporate schedules fail during a crisis, how to effectively advocate for your own physical limitations, and how employers can provide genuine flexibility instead of rigid, transactional policies. If you care about workplace culture, healthcare advocacy, and supporting colleagues through crisis, you will get a lot from this conversation. Please remember to subscribe to the channel and share this episode with anyone navigating a major health transition at work. What is the most impactful way a manager or colleague has supported you during a personal or medical crisis? Let us know in the comments below.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til at kommentere

Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Hope Unscripted-fællesskabet!

Kom i gang

1 måned kun 9 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / måned · Opsig når som helst.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle episoder

9 episoder

episode Ep . 9 - Living Life Fully After Cancer with Nicole Foote cover

Ep . 9 - Living Life Fully After Cancer with Nicole Foote

Procrastination is a health risk we can never afford to take. During National Cancer Survivor Month, it is critical to talk about the real impact of delaying routine screenings and the difference taking action makes in an unexpected battle. In this conversation, we sit down with Nicole Foote, a breast cancer survivor and dedicated board member of Hope Cancer Resources, to unpack her personal fight and ongoing advocacy. We get into the specifics of navigating a HER2-positive breast cancer diagnosis while maintaining a high-level corporate career. The discussion covers the critical role of physical fitness communities, the process of estrogen suppression therapies, and the mental toll of six-hour chemotherapy sessions during a pandemic. Nicole shares a pivotal realization that finding purpose and looking out for others while in the chemo chair completely alters how you approach the fight. The recovery process involves physical tolls and isolation that are rarely discussed openly. We talk about the profound impact of losing your hair, the physical exhaustion of a spiked heart rate during simple workouts, and the struggle of an extrovert learning to accept quiet support from friends. You will walk away with a better understanding of how to genuinely support a loved one in treatment and the clear reminder that prioritizing your health is always worth the time investment. If you care about proactive health decisions, finding reliable community in hardship, and navigating the complex transition into true survivorship, you will get a lot from this. Please subscribe to the channel and share this conversation with anyone who might need a reminder to take care of themselves. What is the one health appointment you need to stop putting off and schedule today?

3. juni 202630 min
episode Ep. 8 - Working While Healing: Navigating Cancer, Career & Survivorship cover

Ep. 8 - Working While Healing: Navigating Cancer, Career & Survivorship

A cancer diagnosis changes everything instantly, but the reality for many patients is that professional responsibilities do not simply disappear. Navigating the logistics of intensive medical treatments while maintaining an identity and standing in the workplace creates an immense dual burden. In this episode, we tackle the complex intersection of employment, active treatment, and long-term survivorship. We sit down with Brittney Duke, a retail marketing professional and multi-time cancer survivor, to discuss how professionals can manage their careers while facing life-altering health crises. We get into the specific corporate frameworks and personal choices that allow an employee to stay engaged without burning out. Brittney Duke shares her journey through a bone marrow disorder, leukemia, breast cancer, and colon cancer, offering a rare perspective on what it means to be the CEO of your own health. We break down the impact of formalized corporate programs like the Working with Cancer pledge, the necessity of open communication lines between managers and associates, and the value of small, highly personalized team gestures like peer support groups. Our discussion highlights how a workplace can shift from a source of stress to a pillar of stability and normalcy during extended medical leaves and subsequent returns to the office. The unglamorous truth is that returning to work after treatment is rarely a seamless transition because the person coming back is physically and emotionally changed. Employees often struggle with ongoing fatigue, the pressure to look normal when they do not feel normal, and the exhausting task of constantly fighting health insurance companies for pre-authorizations. Viewers will walk away with a clear understanding of why strict corporate schedules fail during a crisis, how to effectively advocate for your own physical limitations, and how employers can provide genuine flexibility instead of rigid, transactional policies. If you care about workplace culture, healthcare advocacy, and supporting colleagues through crisis, you will get a lot from this conversation. Please remember to subscribe to the channel and share this episode with anyone navigating a major health transition at work. What is the most impactful way a manager or colleague has supported you during a personal or medical crisis? Let us know in the comments below.

20. maj 202630 min
episode Ep. 7 - Sun Safety Matters: Know the Skin Cancer Risks cover

Ep. 7 - Sun Safety Matters: Know the Skin Cancer Risks

Neglecting your skin isn't just about wrinkles—it’s about managing your body’s largest organ and its primary defense against the world. Many people treat sun protection as an afterthought or rely on "base tans" that offer zero real protection, but the reality is that cumulative UV radiation is a silent profit leak for your long-term health. We sit down with Dr. Courtney Book from True Dermatology and wellness manager Hannah Qualls to dismantle the myths surrounding skin cancer and provide a tactical guide for prevention. We get into the specific mechanics of UV damage and why certain populations, including childhood cancer survivors and outdoor workers, face significantly elevated stakes. The conversation covers the tactical use of "missing-middle" protection like UV sleeves and wide-brimmed hats, the chemical differences between mineral and synthetic sunscreens, and the clinical reality of Mohs micrographic surgery. Dr. Book shares her "secret sauce" for early detection: the Ugly Duckling sign, a simple mental framework for identifying high-risk lesions before they require extensive surgical repair. The unglamorous truth is that skin cancer can be a quiet, slow-moving threat that many ignore until the surgical margins required for a cure become invasive and life-altering. You will walk away with a clear understanding of how to conduct a monthly "inventory" of your own skin and why a 10-minute daily habit is the most effective hedge against future complications. This isn't about fear; it's about shifting your mindset from reactive treatment to proactive maintenance.

6. maj 202640 min
episode Ep. 6 - Radiation Therapy: Myths, Facts, and What Really Happens cover

Ep. 6 - Radiation Therapy: Myths, Facts, and What Really Happens

Radiation therapy has a reputation it no longer deserves. When someone hears they “need radiation,” the mind jumps to worst-case stories, dramatic machines, and side effects that feel inevitable. We wanted the facts, so we sat down with Julie Maday, radiology clinic manager at Highlands Oncology, to translate the process into plain language and calm some of the fear that shows up the moment people start Googling. We talk through the difference between radiology and radiation, why imaging like CT scans and MRIs is the backbone of cancer care, and how radiation treatment has become incredibly site-specific. Julie explains what the linear accelerator is actually like, what patients typically feel during treatment, and why the first visit is often a planning CT rather than “day one.” We also dig into the hidden precision work: dosimetrists building custom plans, physicists verifying accuracy, and therapists using daily X-rays to align treatment within millimeters. Beyond the technology, we spend time on the human side of cancer treatment. Julie shares how anxiety and anger can peak before the first session, how therapists support patients through humor and steady routines, and why protecting independence can be just as important as comfort. We also answer a question we hear all the time: after external beam radiation therapy, are you radioactive, can you hug your family, and what does “radioactive” even mean? If this helped you, subscribe so you don’t miss future conversations, share it with someone facing radiation therapy, and leave a review to help more people find Hope Unscripted. What question about radiation or cancer screening do you want us to tackle next?

15. apr. 202631 min
episode Ep. 5 - Nicotine Addiction: Why Your Brain Can’t Let Go with Leisha Atwood cover

Ep. 5 - Nicotine Addiction: Why Your Brain Can’t Let Go with Leisha Atwood

If you’ve ever thought “Why can’t I just stop?” this conversation puts real words to what your brain and body are doing and how to work with it instead of fighting blind. Brittnee sits down with Leisha Atwood, Hope Cancer Resources’ nationally certified tobacco treatment specialist, to talk about what tobacco addiction actually is, why cravings can feel immediate, and how people move from stuck to steady progress. We get into the science of nicotine dependence, including how nicotine can hit the brain in seconds and activate the reward pathway. From there, we zoom out to the everyday reality: vaping can be harder to quit because it’s easy to use constantly, often without noticing how much. We also unpack smokeless tobacco and nicotine pouches, why higher nicotine levels can raise dependence, and why “you can’t even smell it” sometimes makes the habit easier to hide and harder to break. We also connect the dots between tobacco and cancer prevention, cancer treatment, and healing. Leisha explains why tobacco use can affect energy, breathing, immune function, and even surgical timelines when someone is told they must quit before an operation. Most importantly, we talk about shame, relapse, and the very normal reality that many people need multiple quit attempts before it sticks, plus the practical support that helps: weekly coaching, trigger planning, coping skills, and nicotine replacement therapy options. If you or someone you love wants to quit smoking, quit vaping, or quit smokeless tobacco, listen now and share this with a friend who needs it. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us what trigger you want help tackling next.

1. apr. 202630 min