“For example, painters have long worked with pigments containing lead, carbon black, cadmium, chromium and arsenic compounds” (Miller and Blair 169). Those are just some examples of the hazardous materials that these artists use, not knowing the full effect it is having on their bodies. In a mortality study of 323 white female artists, most of them being painters, 76 died of a form of cancer and 20 of them from breast cancer (Miller and Blair 170). Once the cancer was discovered, the effects of the disease were tragic and prevented women from being able to function as they normally would, due to nausea, pain and even debilitating …show more content…
In lieu of that fact, people do not always think of the effect cancer has on the caregivers, relatives, and friends of the cancer patient. In research done on family members of individuals battling breast cancer, it was discovered that children of the patient often dealt with low self-esteem, depression, and even a drop in school grades (Hammond 457). Husbands of cancer patients showed signs of higher distress and lower levels of adjustment as the cancer battle raged on and they continued to watch their wives fight the disease (Hammond