'Once treatment stops, and people leave strictly managed clinical environments, survivors feel as though they had "fallen off a cliff edge"... feeling isolated and abandoned at a time when support is needed the most'.  - <I>Mental Health Foundation</I><BR/><BR/> From the final infusion to the five-year check, <I>After Breast Cancer </I>gives a step-by-step support package to coping post-treatment. It follows on from Sara Liyanage's successful coverage of diagnosis and treatment in <I>Ticking Off Breast Cancer, </I>and is driven not only by her experience of illness, but underpinned by contributions from leading oncologists, heads of cancer services, and clinical consultant psychologists.<BR/><BR/> With a readable blend of informality and medically endorsed insight, <I>After Breast Cancer </I>has an optimistic outlook and a reassuring tone, but doesn't flinch from discussing the possibility of secondary cancer, or the