Clinical analysis of the care pathway among women who underwent mastectomy following breast cancer in Cameroon

Authors

  • Alvy Gislaine Magne Fongang Laboratory of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, University of Douala, Cameroon, Cameroon https://orcid-org/0009-0002-5106-7435
  • Martial Nguegno Fouadjo Laboratory of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, University of Douala, Cameroon, Cameroon https://orcid.org/0009-0004-3466-4937

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47679/jopp.8214692026

Keywords:

Breast cancer, Mastectomy, Care pathway, Psychological experience, Cameroon

Abstract

This article examines the care trajectory and psychological experience of women who have undergone mastectomy following breast cancer in Cameroon, using a qualitative clinical and interpretative approach. Based on semi-structured clinical interviews with three women receiving follow-up care in an oncology department in the Western region of Cameroon, the study highlights how the care pathway extends beyond biomedical treatment and is shaped by sociocultural meanings, economic constraints, family dynamics, and spiritual interpretations. Findings reveal diagnostic delays, therapeutic wandering, and the frequent coexistence of biomedical medicine, traditional practices, and religious healing in patients’ trajectories. Mastectomy emerges as a major embodied disruption affecting body image, self-esteem, sexuality, marital relationships, and feminine identity, often intensified by stigma and fear of social judgment. However, the study also identifies resilience processes supported by children, family bonds, faith, and opportunities for psychological verbalization. This research contributes to the literature by emphasizing mastectomy as a relational and meaning-making experience embedded in a plural medical and cultural context. Practical implications include the need for earlier diagnostic communication, improved health education, partner-sensitive counseling, and integrated psychosocial support throughout the care pathway.

Author Biographies

Alvy Gislaine Magne Fongang, Laboratory of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, University of Douala, Cameroon

Alvy Gislaine Magne Fongang is a clinical psychologist and PhD candidate at the University of Douala (Cameroon), affiliated with the Laboratory of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences. Her research focuses on the psychological experience of women diagnosed with breast cancer, particularly those who have undergone mastectomy, with emphasis on identity transformation, suffering, and resilience in sociocultural contexts.

Martial Nguegno Fouadjo, Laboratory of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, University of Douala, Cameroon

Martial Nguegno Fouadjo is a clinical psychologist and PhD candidate in the Department of Psychology at the University of Douala, within the Laboratory of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences. His research interests include trauma, psychological suffering, and coping processes among vulnerable populations, particularly internally displaced persons affected by armed conflict in Cameroon.

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Published

2026-06-01

How to Cite

Fongang, A. G. M., & Fouadjo, M. N. (2026). Clinical analysis of the care pathway among women who underwent mastectomy following breast cancer in Cameroon. Journal of Psychological Perspective, 8(2), 115–120. https://doi.org/10.47679/jopp.8214692026

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Original Research Articles

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