4 Steps to Take When There’s a Food Recall and You Have Cancer
People with cancer should be careful to avoid handling or eating recalled food products. Here’s what to do if you may have a recalled food in your home.
People with cancer should be careful to avoid handling or eating recalled food products. Here’s what to do if you may have a recalled food in your home.
In this month’s From the Editor’s Desk, Dr. Schapira reflects on this year’s Advance of the Year and what it says about cancer research more broadly.
In this podcast, Cancer.Net Associate Editor Dr. Michael Williams describes lymphoma research advances presented at the American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting.
In her first From the Editor’s Desk of 2019, Dr. Schapira writes about setting goals and resolutions for the new year and how exercise helps people with cancer regain a much-needed sense of control and success in their lives.
Some recent FDA approvals have made many people aware of tumor-agnostic treatments. But what does that mean and how could it benefit someone with cancer? ASCO Chief Medical Officer Richard L. Schilsky gives insight into this new way of thinking about cancer treatment.
In this month’s From the Editor’s Desk, Dr. Schapira discusses the role of tracking and reporting side effects in high-quality care, including advances in patient-reported outcomes or PROs.
If a natural disaster hits your area, it may be hard to get the cancer care you need. Learn what you can do before, during, and after an emergency situation to make sure you’re prepared.
Learn about your legal rights and how to ask for workplace accommodations during and after treatment.