Life After Cancer

🎀 Fight.Cure.Win • Survivorship

Life After Cancer

Finishing treatment is a huge milestone. Survivorship focuses on staying healthy, monitoring for recurrence, and managing long-term effects—so you can thrive in your next chapter.

Your Survivorship Care Plan

Ask your oncology team for a written plan you can share with your primary care provider. It should include:

  • Treatment summary: cancer type/stage, surgeries, drugs, radiation, dates, key pathology/biomarkers.
  • Follow-up schedule: visits, imaging, labs, survivorship clinics.
  • Late effects to watch for and who to call for each.
  • Screening & prevention: vaccines, routine cancer screenings, lifestyle goals.
  • Support: rehab, lymphedema therapy, counseling, fertility/sexual health, financial/legal resources.

Bring this plan to all appointments and update it after scans, labs, or new symptoms.

Follow-Up & Monitoring

  • Visits Regular checkups with oncology and primary care (typically every 3–6 months at first, then less often).
  • Tests Imaging or labs as guided by your cancer type/stage and symptoms.
  • Second cancers Keep up with age-appropriate screenings (breast, cervical, colorectal, prostate, skin).
  • Vaccines Annual flu, COVID-19 per guidance, and others as recommended.

Follow-up timing varies by diagnosis—your team will personalize your plan.

Managing Long-Term & Late Effects

Common Issues

  • Fatigue, sleep changes, “chemo brain”
  • Nerve pain/neuropathy; joint or muscle stiffness
  • Lymphedema or swelling after node surgery/radiation
  • Heart or lung effects (drug- or radiation-related)
  • Bone health (osteopenia/osteoporosis)
  • Fertility or hormonal changes
  • Anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress, fear of recurrence

What Helps

  • Rehab & exercise: PT/OT, cancer-specific exercise programs; start low, go slow.
  • Nutrition: plant-forward pattern, lean proteins, fiber; tailor if swallowing/GI issues.
  • Sleep: consistent schedule; limit caffeine late; CBT-I if needed.
  • Mental health: counseling, peer groups, mindfulness, faith resources.
  • Specialists: cardiology, endocrinology, pelvic floor therapy, lymphedema therapists.

Healthy Living After Treatment

Everyday Foundations

  • Move most days (aim for 150+ minutes/week of moderate activity as tolerated).
  • Strength training 2–3 days/week; flexibility/balance work.
  • Don’t smoke or vape; avoid secondhand smoke.
  • Limit alcohol; hydrate well.
  • Sun safety: protective clothing and SPF 30+.

Nutrition Snapshot

  • Colorful fruits/vegetables, whole grains, beans, nuts.
  • Lean proteins (fish, poultry, soy, legumes); limit processed/red meat.
  • Maintain a healthy weight; work with an oncology dietitian for tailored plans.

Work, Finances, & Practical Matters

Returning to Work or School

  • Discuss phased return or flexible schedule with your employer or school.
  • Ask your team for documentation regarding temporary accommodations.
  • Plan for energy management: breaks, hydration, snacks, pacing.

Insurance & Rights

  • Know your coverage for follow-up care, rehab, and mental health services.
  • Ask social workers about disability benefits, FMLA leave, and community grants.
  • Keep copies of all major test results and pathology reports.

Sexual Health & Fertility

Intimacy & Body Image

  • Changes are common; open communication helps.
  • Consider counseling, pelvic floor therapy, or sexual health clinics experienced in oncology.
  • Vaginal moisturizers/lubricants, erectile dysfunction treatments, or devices may help—ask your clinician.

Fertility & Family Planning

  • Discuss timelines for trying to conceive and safe birth control options.
  • Fertility testing or referral to reproductive endocrinology when needed.
  • Pregnancy after cancer is possible for many—coordinate closely with your oncology and OB teams.

Fear of Recurrence & Emotional Well-Being

What It Feels Like

  • Worry often spikes before scans or around anniversaries.
  • Triggers can include aches, fatigue, or news stories.

Tools That Help

  • Evidence-based therapies: CBT, mindfulness, acceptance & commitment therapy.
  • Peer support and survivorship groups (in-person or online).
  • Healthy routines: movement, sleep, and social connection.
🚩 When to Call Your Doctor
  • New or worsening pain, shortness of breath, persistent cough, or chest pain
  • Unexplained weight loss, fevers, or night sweats
  • Neurologic changes (new headaches, weakness, confusion, vision changes)
  • Bleeding, blood in stool/urine, or severe GI changes
  • New lumps, swelling, or skin changes
  • Emotional distress that interferes with daily life (ask for counseling/medication support)

Mini Survivorship Care Plan (Fill-In)

  • My diagnosis: ______________________________
  • Treatments received (type & dates): ______________________________
  • My next appointments: ______________________________
  • Monitoring tests I need (and when): ______________________________
  • Possible late effects for me: ______________________________
  • Who to contact for symptoms/questions: ______________________________
  • My wellness goals (sleep, movement, nutrition, stress): ______________________________

Tip: Print this or copy it into your notes app and keep it updated.

Helpful resources: NCI: SurvivorshipNCI: Life After CancerACS: Survivorship. Educational content only—always follow your care team’s guidance.

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