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In Her Words: The Silent Battles of Egyptian Women with Breast Cancer

This study investigates the emotional, social, and economic difficulties encountered by Egyptian women from middle- to working-class origins after a breast cancer diagnosis. Despite being a worldwide health concern, local cultural, institutional, and economic circumstances have a significant impact...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ahmed Hassan, Nada Mohamed, NH
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2026
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Summary:This study investigates the emotional, social, and economic difficulties encountered by Egyptian women from middle- to working-class origins after a breast cancer diagnosis. Despite being a worldwide health concern, local cultural, institutional, and economic circumstances have a significant impact on the lived consequences of breast cancer. Women's post-diagnosis experiences in Egypt are greatly exacerbated by deeply ingrained gender stereotypes, stigma associated with cancer, and systemic injustices in the healthcare system. This research emphasizes women's situated knowledge and views their bodily experiences as crucial sources of insight into larger societal power relations. It is based on feminist perspective theory, especially the work of Sandra Harding and Nancy Hartsock. In order to investigate how intersecting patterns of gender, class, and cultural expectations impact emotional distress, access to care, and social support, the study employs an experiential qualitative methodology that highlights women's own narratives. Results show that loneliness, anxiety, low self-esteem, and emotional silence are common among women and are frequently made worse by insufficient support systems and unequal access to treatment. These difficulties are not just personal or psychological; rather, they are ingrained in patriarchal social relationships and class-based limitations that restrict women's autonomy and visibility in both family and medical contexts. The study also emphasizes women's coping mechanisms and resilience as common kinds of resistance that emerged in limited situations. By highlighting the critical need for culturally sensitive, gender-responsive, and psychosocial support frameworks that address women's lived realities outside of the clinical setting, this research advances feminist scholarship, community-based healthcare approaches, and public health policy by going beyond a purely biomedical understanding of breast cancer.