For Tobacco Cessation Counseling Contact Indian Cancer Society : +91-9513074567

For Tobacco Cessation Counseling Contact
Indian Cancer Soceity : +91-9513074567

Loved ones suffer just as much

— Sri Rajeshwari (Volunteer Counsellor)

Raju, a software engineer, lost his father when he was only four years old. His mother raised him single-handedly with utmost difficulty and determination. Now, in her last stages of cancer, she was admitted to the hospital for palliative care. Being a family of just two, Raju was very close to his mother.

When we were counselling him he expressed his feelings like a small child. He said that if his mother were to leave him he wouldn’t be able to bear the pain. While he was talking to us, his cousin sister who was sitting beside his mother, came out and broke the news that his mother was no more. Raju burst into tears. He was petrified of being alone. His cousin sister somehow managed to take him near his mother. In that moment we too lost our composure pained by the effect of this news on Raju.

Life lessons we learnt from this incidence:

  1. It is not just the Cancer patients, their adult children too bear the pain of Cancer.
  2. Children, friends and relatives will be affected emotionally and financially by the loss of cancer patients. Some may lose hope, opt for detachment from the society, get into anxiety or depression. They may also suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder(PTSD). Grief is inevitable. Each aggrieved person needs counselling for few months.
  3. Talking about feelings and personal needs with honesty, sincerity and openness lowers the stress. Family and friends play a life giving role here. If someone is having a hard time, they should consider joining a support group, or talk with counsellor or social worker.

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Kala Devarajan

Kala Devarajan is a Chartered Accountant by profession, and has corporate work experience in the Manufacturing and Financial Sectors.

1996 was a landmark year when she joined the Bangalore Hospice Trust, Karunashraya, as a volunteer. Her professional expertise helped her assist with their finance planning, fund raising and administration. She was invited to join the Board of Trustees in the year 2000 and has been contributing as the Treasurer for the past 20 plus years.

Dr Latha Devarajan

Dr. Latha Jagannathan is the Medical Director and Managing Trustee of the not-for-profit organization, Bangalore Medical Services Trust, (BMST). She founded BMST in 1984 and has been responsible for its operations and growth into the only standalone facility in India with a Blood Centre, HLA Laboratory and Tissue Bank, providing a wide spectrum of services in the field of blood, organ & cellular therapies.

She is a founder member of the Indian Cancer Society, Karnataka and Karunashraya. She is on the board of MYRADA, a developmental organization, and Samraksha, an NGO working in the field of HIV & AIDS.

She is an invited member of several Government, National & International bodies on Health, Blood Banking, and Transplant Immunology and the Task Force on Health and Family Welfare, Karnataka.

Kishore Rao

Kishore Rao started Indian Cancer Society, Karnataka, in 1986 as a voluntary organisation, and today ICS has offices in Kalaburagi and Mangaluru besides Bengaluru. In 1994 he started Karunashraya in partnership with Rotary Bangalore Indiranagar- a shining example of a cancer hospice across the country. Kishore has been in the not-for-profit sector for the last 35 years.