Young
People with Cancer
A Handbook for Parents
National Cancer Institute
National Institutes of Health
Introduction:
This guide was written for
you-a parent of a young person with cancer. It addresses some of the most
common questions about cancer in the young, combining medical information
with practical suggestions. Special consideration is given to the emotional
impact of cancer on patients and family members. This guide is designed to
help you cope with the stress of a chronic disease that entails rigorous
treatment, frequent visits to the doctor and hospital, interruptions in
schooling and social activities, physical change, and perhaps most
frightening of all, uncertainty about the future.
Because cancer in adults and children actually involves over 100 distinct
diseases and no two patients or families are alike, this guide cannot
address every issue or situation that will arise. Instead, it provides a
general view of childhood cancer: what to expect from it and how to deal
with it.
Direct specific questions to your family physician and/or other members of
the treatment team. If you want more information in special interest areas,
you may want to refer to the section entitled Sources of Information,
Support, and Assistance.
The terms used in this guide are those used by treatment team members when
talking about your child's disease or treatment. Some of these at first may
be unfamiliar to you. The glossary defines terms used in the guide and
others that might be used by your doctor or others involved in your child's
care.
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