Helpful Hints For Patients In Treatment
Helpful Hints For Patients In Treatment
Try to plan ahead
Nausea
Do you have an anti-nausea prescription from your doctor? If not, request one. Get it filled before you start your treatments. Take per directions when you feel you might be getting nauseous. It’s better to take it sooner than later. You can take anti-nausea medications every day, not just on those days when you’re getting treatment.
Constipation/Diarrhea
There is a difference between stool softeners and laxatives. There are even stool softeners with laxative (“stimulant”) in them. Plan ahead – take a stool softener the morning of your treatment if you have found that treatment causes constipation. (Frequently Benadryl causes constipation as well as some of the meds given via IV to prevent nausea.) Same with anti-diarrheal medications. Make sure to follow the instructions on the bottle.
OTC constipation suggestions: Senakot tablets, Milk of Magnesia, magnesium tablets, generic stool softeners (Colace), Miralax.
OTC diarrhea suggestions: Imodium AD
Drink water
Try to drink at least 64 oz of water/day. It will help flush the chemo drugs from your body, will help keep constipation at bay, and will help with flushing out your kidneys.
Eat protein
You need to eat protein to help rebuild your cells from chemo treatments. Try to eat 80 grams of protein each day. If you read the labels on food, you will be amazed to see which items have protein in them. Be forewarned that some protein sources don’t have much fiber, so you may need to counter that by eating more fiber or taking fiber tabs.
Hemp seeds: ¼ cup = 11 grams protein
Quinoa: 1 cup cooked = 8 grams protein
Edamame: 1 cup = 17 grams protein
Tofu: 3 ounces = 9 grams protein
Lentils: 1 cup = 18 grams protein
Kidney beans: 1 cup = 13 grams protein
Low-fat plain Greek yogurt: 6 ounces = 18 grams protein
Eggs: 2 large = 12 grams protein
Vision changes
When you’re in the hospital, what can you ask for?
(compiled by Susie Garrison, approved by Dr Homayoon Sanati)
Evidence
- Cancer and stress: counselling the cancer patient
- Effect of psychosocial treatment on survival of patients with metastatic breast cancer
- Malignant melanoma
- Impact of psychotherapeutic support for patients with gastrointestinal cancer undergoing surgery
- Psychologic intervention improves survival for breast cancer patients
- The Science and Practice of Beat the Odds