While the big advancements in cancer research have allowed people with colon cancer to live longer, they still have the disease. This section is designed to help you navigate your life after a diagnosis, or after treatment. From surgery recovery periods to the difference a positive attitude can make, this section compiles information from leading colorectal doctors about how to move on with your life, while keeping a vigilant eye on your body.
Fact Checked
/ Updated June 21st, 2018SurvivorNet Fact Checking and Medical Review Standards:
The SurvivorNet News Team creates high quality medical information that complies with our industry leading standards for factual accuracy and sourcing from leading experts at academic medical institutions. Every news article is thoroughly fact-checked by our physician collaborators. We vet each piece of work for factual integrity, impartiality, and clearly label any professional conflicts.
All SurvivorNet articles adhere to the following standards:
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- All content related to new treatments, drugs, procedures, and so on must clearly describe availability, side effects, treatment target (such as triple negative breast cancer)
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- We strive to give the reader relevant background information and include, clearly-sourced contextual health information in all articles. Readers are clearly alerted to any conflicts of interest from a medical source or the authors of a cited study.
Living With Colorectal Cancer
Adele Roberts Says Bowel Cancer Changed Her
Mom, 43, Was Young, Fit and Struggling With Constipation that Turned Out to Be Signs of Stage 4 Bowel Cancer
Former Britney Spears Back-up Dancer Criscilla Anderson, 43, Celebrates Love With Husband Coffey, 45, Love As She Fights Advanced Colon Cancer
New treatment may soon be available for metastatic colorectal cancer
Living and Thriving With a Colostomy Bag
Sex After Colon Cancer Surgery