CancerSurvivorMD®

Brad Buchanan and G [Josie] van Londen

Hello! Welcome to CancerSurvivorMD’s podcast by Brad and Josie! We will share our experiences with living in sickness, health, and anything in between to allow healing and growth. The topics will focus on cancer survivors and caregivers but will likely resonate with anyone who has been diagnosed with any health condition. Brad is a retired English professor and cancer survivor, now a facilitator of the Writing as Healing workshop. Josie is a retired medical oncologist and cancer survivor.  If you have any questions or topic suggestions, please send them our way, and we will try to incorporate your request.  Please take a look at the disclaimers (https://cancersurvivormd.org/disclaimers). Words can hurt—if you feel you might get or have been triggered, please stop listening and seek support.  

  1. 3D AGO

    Provider Chat with Janette Poppenberg

    In this episode of Cancer Survivor MD, Dr. Josie van Londen is joined by Brad Buchanan, Colleen Dwyer Diehl, and special guest Janette Poppenberg, a cancer-certified personal trainer in the Pittsburgh area, for a practical and compassionate conversation about physical activity after cancer treatment. Focusing on survivors who are no longer in active therapy, the group discusses how to safely begin moving again, why “start where you are” matters, and how small, consistent steps can help rebuild strength, stamina, confidence, and trust in the body. Janette explains what a cancer-certified personal trainer does, how assessments can be individualized, and why range of motion, aerobic capacity, and muscular strength all matter in survivorship. The conversation also explores cancer-related fatigue, the role of medical clearance and primary care involvement, the potential value of oncology massage, and realistic motivation strategies—such as starting with five minutes a day, pairing movement with something enjoyable, and finding supportive groups or classes. The episode emphasizes that exercise is not about perfection or pressure, but about finding safe, meaningful ways to move that fit each survivor’s body, energy, goals, and life. Links relevant to this episode: https://acsm.org/physical-activity-guidelines-cancer-infographic/  https://usreps.org/registry/# Contact Janette Poppenberg for information about her sessions by emailing her at JTPoppenberg@gmail.com General Links: Disclaimers: https://cancersurvivormd.org/disclaimers/Brad Buchanan: https://linktr.ee/bradthechimeraG [Josie] van Londen: https://linktr.ee/cancersurvivormdCancerBridges: https://cancerbridges.org/

    38 min
  2. MAY 8

    Author Chat with Carolyn Roy-Bornstein

    In this Author Chat, Josie van Londen and Brad Buchanan speak with pediatrician and writer Carolyn Roy-Bornstein about her new book, A Prescription for Burnout: Restorative Writing for Healthcare Professionals. Carolyn explores burnout not as a personal failure, but as a signal of disconnection from meaning, purpose, and the soul of medicine. Together they discuss how writing can help clinicians process grief, anger, moral injury, compassion fatigue, uncertainty, and the emotional weight of bearing witness to suffering. The conversation also explores reflective writing as a tool for self-awareness, restoration, openness, and reconnection with the sacred moments that still exist in healthcare. Links relevant to this episode: https://www.press.jhu.edu/books/title/54082/prescription-burnout https://www.carolynroybornstein.com/https://www.mindgarden.com/117-maslach-burnout-inventory-mbi https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/How-Do-You-Feel/Jessi-Gold/9781982199784 https://www.buzzsprout.com/2308830/episodes/15489603 https://manuptocancer.org https://www.cityofhope.org/about-city-of-hope/who-we-are/our-history https://www.cityofhope.org/orange-county/blog/unveiling-a-new-symbol-of-hopeSacred Moment Experiences Among Internal Medicine Physicians https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2834653#google_vignettehttps://suzannekoven.com/book/ https://pemachodronfoundation.orghttps://www.mhe.cuimc.columbia.edu/division-narrative-medicine  General Links: Disclaimers: https://cancersurvivormd.org/disclaimers/Brad Buchanan: https://linktr.ee/bradthechimeraG [Josie] van Londen: https://linktr.ee/cancersurvivormdCancerBridges: https://cancerbridges.org/

    53 min
  3. APR 15

    Essential Elements of Cancersurvivorship Care: Care Coordination

    In this final episode of The Essential Elements of Cancer Survivorship Care, we explore care coordination—the complex, often overwhelming task of managing life after cancer. From juggling medical appointments, work, family, and personal healing, to navigating uncertainty and shifting priorities, survivorship can feel like a full-time job. Dr. Josie van Londen, along with social worker Colleen Dwyer and survivor Brad Buchanan, share practical insights and deeply personal experiences. They discuss the importance of self-compassion, speaking up when overwhelmed, and leaning on both healthcare teams and loved ones for support. Brad’s powerful story highlights the real-world challenges of coordinating care across multiple specialists, navigating conflicting medical decisions, and accessing life-saving treatments. This episode offers validation, guidance, and encouragement to help you find your own path through the complexities of survivorship—reminding you that you don’t have to do it alone. Links relevant to this episode: https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/the-birds-of-poverty-ridge-by-brad-buchanan/https://www.nmdp.org/patients/transplant-support/life-after-transplant/physical-recovery/graft-versus-host-disease/gvhd-treatment/extracorporeal-photopheresis-ecp General Links: Disclaimers: https://cancersurvivormd.org/disclaimers/Brad Buchanan: https://linktr.ee/bradthechimeraG [Josie] van Londen: https://linktr.ee/cancersurvivormdCancerBridges: https://cancerbridges.org/

    26 min
  4. MAR 16

    Essential Elements of Cancersurvivorship Care: Symptoms

    Colleen Dwyer, Brad Buchanan, and Dr Josie explain in this episode that symptoms after cancer treatment can be physical, emotional, functional, or financial, and they often come in clusters. Some begin during treatment, some appear much later, and some problems such as bone loss or heart disease may stay silent until they become serious. Because evidence for symptom treatment in cancer survivors is sometimes limited, care often involves shared decision-making: talking openly with providers about symptoms, personal preferences, and the pros and cons of different options. A major theme is that survivors should not hide symptoms or try to manage everything alone. Help may come from many places, including doctors, physical therapy, occupational therapy, talk therapy, massage, exercise programs, and community resources. Brad’s story shows how recovery can involve trial and error, emotional healing, trauma processing, support for intimacy and relationships, and adapting over time as the body changes. The episode also strongly emphasizes support groups. They help normalize what people are experiencing, reduce isolation, offer practical advice, and create meaning. Survivors may not always be ready right away, but finding the right group and staying connected can be deeply helpful.  Overall, the message is: speak up, keep seeking support, and remember that healing after cancer is an ongoing process that is best done with a team. Relevant links for this episode:  https://manuptocancer.org/https://onecancerplace.org/https://colontown.org/GvHD Speaks has been defunded since this recording.  General Links: Disclaimers: https://cancersurvivormd.org/disclaimers/Brad Buchanan: https://linktr.ee/bradthechimeraG [Josie] van Londen: https://linktr.ee/cancersurvivormdCancerBridges: https://cancerbridges.org/

    42 min
  5. MAR 5

    Essential Elements of Cancersurvivorship Care: Lifestyle

    In this episode of the Cancer Survivor MD podcast series on essential elements of cancer survivorship care, Dr. Josie van Londen is joined by Brad Buchanan and Colleen Dwyer to discuss lifestyle and health behaviors as tools for coping and healing after cancer. The conversation explores how survivors often turn to diet, exercise, and other habits to regain a sense of control, while emphasizing the importance of balance rather than perfection. The group discusses practical guidance—such as starting lifestyle changes slowly, focusing on moderation and variety in diet (with some evidence supporting Mediterranean-style eating), and being cautious with unregulated supplements unless medically indicated. They also highlight how building a personal “toolkit” of coping strategies—movement, mindfulness, creative outlets, therapy, and community support—can help survivors process stress and adapt to life after treatment. Through Brad’s powerful personal story of recovery and adaptation after intensive cancer therapy, the episode underscores that healing is often gradual and individualized, and that survivors benefit from experimenting with different approaches while giving themselves time, compassion, and support along the way. Relevant links for this episode:  EMDR: https://www.apa.org/topics/psychotherapy/emdr-therapy-ptsd General Links: Disclaimers: https://cancersurvivormd.org/disclaimers/Brad Buchanan: https://linktr.ee/bradthechimeraG [Josie] van Londen: https://linktr.ee/cancersurvivormdCancerBridges: https://cancerbridges.org/

    39 min

Trailer

About

Hello! Welcome to CancerSurvivorMD’s podcast by Brad and Josie! We will share our experiences with living in sickness, health, and anything in between to allow healing and growth. The topics will focus on cancer survivors and caregivers but will likely resonate with anyone who has been diagnosed with any health condition. Brad is a retired English professor and cancer survivor, now a facilitator of the Writing as Healing workshop. Josie is a retired medical oncologist and cancer survivor.  If you have any questions or topic suggestions, please send them our way, and we will try to incorporate your request.  Please take a look at the disclaimers (https://cancersurvivormd.org/disclaimers). Words can hurt—if you feel you might get or have been triggered, please stop listening and seek support.