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AD 2016 Q4

Alert Diver is the dive industry’s leading publication. Featuring DAN’s core content of dive safety, research, education and medical information, each issue is a must-read reference, archived and shared by passionate scuba enthusiasts. In addition, Alert Diver showcases fascinating dive destinations and marine environmental topics through images from the world’s greatest underwater photographers and stories from the most experienced and eloquent dive journalists in the business.

Alert Diver is the dive industry’s leading publication. Featuring DAN’s core content of dive safety, research, education and medical information, each issue is a must-read reference, archived and shared by passionate scuba enthusiasts. In addition, Alert Diver showcases fascinating dive destinations and marine environmental topics through images from the world’s greatest underwater photographers and stories from the most experienced and eloquent dive journalists in the business.

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MEMBER<br />

TO MEMBER<br />

RETURNING TO DIVING<br />

GETTING BACK UNDERWATER AFTER<br />

COMPLEX BREAST CANCER SURGERY<br />

By Connie Crowther<br />

The sleek nurse shark shot out of its<br />

lair as we swam by the coral ledge.<br />

We followed it along the Key Largo,<br />

Fla., reef, swimming through thick<br />

clouds of colorful tropical fish. This<br />

familiar experience felt extraordinary<br />

because it was my first dive after two years of breast<br />

cancer, tests, surgeries, setbacks, treatment and<br />

reconstruction. Last year some people weren’t sure I<br />

would ever dive again.<br />

I have been an active diver and DAN® member for<br />

28 years, and I’ve logged around 2,000 dives during<br />

that time, at home in South Florida as well as abroad.<br />

Since 2007 I have been a trained buddy assisting<br />

Diveheart divers with various or different abilities,<br />

never considering that I would one day be challenged<br />

myself. When my doctor said, “You have invasive<br />

breast cancer” and “You are not a candidate for a<br />

lumpectomy,” I knew I’d have a long trek back<br />

to diving.<br />

The following strategies for getting back into the<br />

water after breast cancer (or any lengthy illness) might<br />

be helpful to other divers:<br />

• From the start, let your doctors know you are a<br />

scuba diver and you want to get back into diving<br />

after your return to wellness.<br />

• Use your love of diving to lighten difficult<br />

moments during treatment. I sat through hours<br />

of chemotherapy looking at diving websites on<br />

my tablet. During tough MRIs and biopsies, I<br />

daydreamed about memorable dives for distraction.<br />

• Be positive. Attitude is everything. An upbeat nature<br />

influences everyone, even your caregivers, and<br />

creates a positive atmosphere for recovery.<br />

• Join a support group for information, sharing, caring<br />

and humor. In my groups we laughed more than we<br />

cried.<br />

• Request physical therapy. Along with continued<br />

exercise, this was a cornerstone of my recovery.<br />

Physical therapy also provides an opportunity to learn<br />

about lymphedema and managing your risk of it.<br />

RACHEL HANCOCK DAVIS<br />

• Keep your dive buddies. Stay in contact through social<br />

media, phone calls, visits and social events.<br />

• Remember your dive gear that’s languishing in the<br />

garage. Have it serviced, and do a trial run in a pool<br />

before using it in open water. I had to replace my<br />

buoyancy compensator, wetsuit, gauges and several<br />

hoses. Everything else needed only a tune-up.<br />

My doctors and therapists established benchmarks<br />

for returning to diving: completing chemotherapy and<br />

treatments, tissue healing, recovery from complex<br />

reconstruction and rebuilding sufficient strength and<br />

range of motion for diving. My oncologist approved me<br />

for diving while I still had a port implanted in my chest.<br />

“Your attitude, enthusiasm and determination to<br />

return to diving were a great part of your spectacular<br />

recovery,” my physical therapist told me. “After your first<br />

dive, you quickly moved to another level of wellness.”<br />

My reconstruction involved a deep inferior epigastric<br />

perforators (DIEP) flap, which is a complex 10-hour<br />

plastic surgery and microsurgery to sculpt flaps of<br />

abdominal tissue into breasts. Candidates for breast<br />

implants require less downtime for recovery — two to<br />

three months compared to my six months.<br />

This summer, with my doctor’s permission, I dived<br />

often, during the day and at night, shallower than 40<br />

feet. I am planning many more dives, including a trip<br />

to Tahiti in 2017. My next challenges are returning to<br />

deeper diving and to again assist Diveheart divers for<br />

their (and my) physical and psychological therapeutic<br />

benefit and for the joy of being underwater. <strong>AD</strong><br />

SHARE YOUR STORY<br />

Do you have tips, advice, travel strategies, dive techniques,<br />

lessons learned or other words of wisdom to share with your<br />

fellow divers? Alert Diver wants your story! Email it to<br />

M2M@dan.org, or mail it to “Member to Member,” c/o Alert<br />

Diver, 6 W. Colony Place, Durham, NC 27705.<br />

106 | FALL <strong>2016</strong>

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