Cancer and Social Media: How Can We Use It to Improve Care?
Social media can help oncologists share valuable research to improve how they treat patients. Patients can also use social media to improve their own care.
Social media can help oncologists share valuable research to improve how they treat patients. Patients can also use social media to improve their own care.
Fatigue is a common side effect of cancer and its treatment. These 8 tips can help you manage it.
Women who survive gynecologic cancer have unique needs. Understanding and addressing these needs will help them celebrate and enjoy their lives after treatment ends.
Cancer.Net Specialty Editor: Breast Cancer
Stanford University, Stanford, CA
Hearing the word cancer is one of people’s biggest fears. In this guest post, Dr. Rick Boulay challenges everything you thought you knew about cancer and shares how he found hope after his wife was diagnosed with leukemia.
Dr. Rick Boulay explores where hope lives and how to access it when we need it the most.
Content on Cancer.Net is approved by the Cancer.Net Editorial Board, composed of over 200 medical, surgical, radiation, and pediatric oncologists, oncology nurses, physician assistants, social workers, and patient advocates.