Hospital, insurance & practical
12 articles shown
When Paint Lands on Your Hands or Clothes — Preparing to Enjoy Painting and Coloring Safely During Cancer Treatment
A practical guide to enjoying painting and coloring during cancer treatment: choosing materials (water-based vs. solvent), protecting hands and skin against hand-foot syndrome and neuropathy, preventing infection during neutropenia, and embracing mistakes as part of the play.
When a Family Wedding Calls for a Full Wig During Chemotherapy — Understanding Rental, Purchase, and Getting Through the Day Comfortably
When chemotherapy-related hair loss makes a partial hairpiece insufficient for a special day such as a child's wedding, this guide explains how to weigh renting versus buying, what to check when choosing a full wig, comfort tips for a long day, and graceful alternatives like scarves and hats.
Is prescription drug cost the same at every pharmacy? Why insured drugs match nationwide while non-covered ones can differ
Insured prescription drugs are priced by a government-set ceiling and a fixed co-payment share, so they cost the same at any pharmacy, whereas non-covered drugs and over-the-counter products can vary from shop to shop. If a bill is large, it is more useful to check why a drug is non-covered and what patient-support options exist than to search for a cheaper pharmacy.
When Your Scheduled Chemotherapy Drug Is Out of Stock — Understanding Cancer Drug Shortages and How to Prepare
What to understand and do when a scheduled chemotherapy drug is out of stock — why drug shortages happen, what alternatives exist, questions for your care team, and how to prepare while you wait.
You've booked a first specialist visit after a cancer diagnosis — will the tests happen the same day, and why staging work-ups spread across several appointments
For anyone facing a first specialist visit after a new cancer diagnosis, this piece explains what can be done the same day, why staging work-ups are often spread across several appointments, and how to prepare when traveling far or living with a condition like dialysis.
When the Hospice You Trust Is Far From Home — Balancing Distance, Travel Burden, and Quality of Care
When a well-regarded hospice is far from home, families must weigh the patient's travel burden, how often relatives can visit, the option of home-based hospice, spiritual care, and waiting lists — choosing not the nearest place but the one where the family can stay present without burning out.
When a Long-Term Care Hospital Costs More Than Expected After the First Chemo — How to Choose Where to Recover and Arrange Caregiving
When a long-term care hospital costs more than expected after a first round of chemo, this piece explains how acute care hospitals, convalescent hospitals, and home differ as places to recover, which items drive up the cost, what indemnity insurance can and cannot cover, and the main caregiving options and how to find a caregiver.
Your Cancer Hospital Is Far Away but the Local ER Sends You Back — How to Prepare for Emergencies When Treated at a Distant Center
Why local ERs may redirect cancer patients back to their distant treating center, how to prepare with an emergency summary and a first call to your care team, and what to weigh when considering transferring care closer to home.
When wound odor makes you want to avoid people — understanding and calmly managing the smell of a malignant fungating wound
Odor from a malignant fungating wound comes from dead tissue and anaerobic bacteria, not poor hygiene. This piece explains wound-level care (cleansing, topical antibiotics, activated-charcoal dressings), environmental odor control (ventilation, charcoal filters, neutralizers), and caring for the emotional weight of it.
Hospice Isn't One Door You Rush Through: Understanding Inpatient, Home-Based, and Consultation Care — and When to Enroll
Hospice is not a single place for the very end but a form of palliative care that eases symptoms and protects quality of life. This article explains inpatient, home-based, and consultation models, the option to register early yet stay home, and how a second opinion and hospice planning can run in parallel.
When a Rising Tumor Marker Means Traveling to a Distant Hospital for a PET-CT — Choosing Lodging Nearby and Getting Ready for the Next Morning's Scan
When a rising tumor marker calls for a PET-CT at a distant major hospital, this guide covers practical preparation for medical travel: choosing convenient lodging near the hospital, packing documents and essentials, and getting ready for the next morning's scan through fasting, blood sugar management, and staying rested.
Can I Hug My Grandchild or Baby After Chemotherapy? Drug Excretion and Safe Closeness
After chemotherapy, drugs can leave the body through urine, sweat, saliva and other fluids for a few days. Everyday closeness such as hugging is generally safe, but infants and pregnant women should avoid direct contact with these fluids, and the exact precaution period should be confirmed with the care team.