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Glossary


Choosing care and treatment for advanced cancer

Making decisions about treatment and care when you have advanced cancer isn’t easy. Only you can make the treatment and care decisions that are right for you on this last stage of your cancer journey. Some people choose to explore every option that might help them live longer, even for a week or month. Others are more concerned with their quality of life during the time they have left. Along the way, many people will offer advice, and what your family wants will be important, but you need to decide what is best for you.

Understanding palliative care

Palliative care provides physical, emotional, social and spiritual support for people with cancer and their families. Palliative treatments can include radiation therapy, chemotherapy, surgery or medicines for pain or other symptoms. The purpose of palliative care is not to cure the cancer but rather to relieve symptoms, control the cancer if possible and improve quality of life.

 

Palliative care doesn’t mean that doctors are giving up. It means that the focus of care changes from trying to cure the cancer to:

  • making you as comfortable as possible
  • helping relieve symptoms, like pain or shortness of breath
  • keeping your quality of life as high as possible
  • providing support during this time, which may be months or years

 

Palliative care specialists, including nurses, doctors, social workers, home health aides, occupational therapists and volunteers, provide this care in:

  • your home
  • pain or palliative care clinics
  • palliative care units in hospitals
  • long-term care facilities
  • hospices, which offer supportive care for people at the end of life, as well as for their families

Staying at home

For some people with advanced cancer and their families, staying at home for as long as possible is very important. Being cared for at home can be very comforting, but it does mean more responsibilities for loved ones who are caregivers. Discuss with members of your healthcare team what it means for you to stay at home so that everyone understands what they need to do.

 

Even with the right support in place, there may come a time when it’s no longer possible for you to stay at home. People with advanced cancer may need medical care and support that is too difficult for family members to provide. It’s important to recognize that moving to a hospice or palliative unit isn’t a failure on anyone’s part. Family members can still offer love and support to someone in a hospice or hospital, while having skilled care from the healthcare team.

References

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We can give information about cancer care and support services in Canada only. To find a cancer organization in your country, visit Union for International Cancer Control or International Cancer Information Service Group.