Learning you have breast cancer doesn’t stop your life. This guide helps provide more information to African American women about what to do once a cancer diagnosis is made and what the next steps should be.
Fact Sheets
Support from loved ones can make all the difference following a cancer diagnosis. This fact sheet offers tips for being as supportive as possible.
Advances in medications to treat long-term illnesses have allowed patients to live with their disease for a long time. This fact sheet provides hints for managing the emotional challenges of coping with CML over time.
Living with metastatic breast cancer is challenging for both the woman who is diagnosed and for her caregivers. This fact sheet offers tips for men about how to deal with this difficult situation.
Once you receive a cancer diagnosis, you may worry about how to tell your loved ones. This fact sheet offers tips on how to communicate what is happening to your children.
This patient fact sheet contains information on the different types of tumors as well as an overview of available biomarker tests and personalized medicine.
A cancer diagnosis raises a wide range of challenges and concerns. This fact sheet describes several kinds of services available to people with cancer and their loved ones, and different ways to find the help you need.
Breast cancer is the most common type of cancer among women in the United States. This patient fact sheet outlines steps that can be taken to prevent the disease early, when it is most preventable.
The holidays, a time for many to celebrate, can cause many cancer patients and their families to feel “out of step” with the rest of the world. This patient fact sheet contains tips for coping with cancer during the holiday season.
This patient fact sheet answers some commonly asked questions about prostate cancer and bone health. It also discusses steps you can take to care for your bones.