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Tag: palliative care

  • Care Dimensions celebrates 20 years of compassionate care at Kaplan House

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    DANVERS — Care Dimensions, the largest hospice and palliative care provider in Massachusetts, recently celebrated the 20th anniversary of the Kaplan Family Hospice House at a special gala event.

    The event, held June 12 at Kernwood Country Club in Salem, brought together community supporters, staff, and volunteers to honor two decades of compassionate end-of-life care at the first-of-its-kind facility in Massachusetts.


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    By News Staff

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    July 12, 2025
  • Walking for hospice care

    Walking for hospice care

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    DANVERS — Care Dimensions, the hospice and palliative care provider, stepped off for its 37th annual Walk for Hospice on Sunday morning on the campus of St. John’s Prep in Danvers.

    The event is designed to offer an opportunity to remember and honor loved ones who have died, while also raising funds for Care Dimensions, which is a nonprofit hospice provider serving more than 100 communities across Eastern Massachusetts.

    Funds from the walk support programs like grief support, music therapy, and other services that benefit hospice patients and their families.

    Before the walk got underway, there were activities and refreshments, as well as music and brief remarks. WCVB meteorologist A.J. Burnett again served as the emcee.

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    By News Staff

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    September 30, 2024
  • Walk for Hospice returning next month in Danvers

    Walk for Hospice returning next month in Danvers

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    DANVERS  —  Care Dimensions, the largest hospice and palliative care provider in Massachusetts, invites the public to attend the 37th annual Walk for Hospice on Sunday, Sept. 29, at 9 a.m. on the campus of St. John’s Prep in Danvers.

    The walk offers an opportunity to remember and honor loved ones who have died, while also raising funds for Care Dimensions, which is a non-profit hospice provider serving more than 100 communities across Eastern Massachusetts.

    “The Walk for Hospice is both a morning of remembrance and a celebration of life,” said Heather Johnston, chief development officer at Care Dimensions. “Most attendees have been personally touched by the compassionate hospice care our organization provides. Every step taken and every dollar raised helps ensure that we can continue offering exceptional care and support to those in need.”

    Funds from the walk support programs like grief support, music therapy, and other services that benefit hospice patients and their families.

    This is a family and dog-friendly event. Before walkers step off, there will be activities and refreshments, as well as music and brief remarks. WCVB meteorologist A.J. Burnett will once again serve as emcee.

    “Care Dimensions does incredibly valuable work that means so much to so many,” Burnett, who has emceed the event since 2020, said. “I am thrilled to continue supporting the annual Walk for Hospice and to help Care Dimensions fulfill their mission of providing meaningful and compassionate end-of-life care for individuals and families.”

    Care Dimensions was founded in 1978 and provides hospice, palliative care, and in-home primary care to over 1,500 patients every day. St. John’s Prep is located at 72 Spring St., Danvers. 

    Learn more and register at: CareDimensions.org/Walk

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    August 31, 2024
  • Deathbed Motivation: The Top 5 Regrets of the Dying

    Deathbed Motivation: The Top 5 Regrets of the Dying

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    If you were on your deathbed right now, what would your biggest regrets be? The answer can change the way you decide to live the rest of your life.


    Thinking about death can change how we live our lives. Our time on Earth is limited, and this realization can completely shift our perspective. It puts our real values and priorities into sharp focus, causing us to step back and re-evaluate if we are living our current lives in the best way possible.

    When I was going through a period of depression in college, I would take the bus to the local cemetery by myself with nothing but my camera. I’ve always been comfortable with solitude and doing things alone, but these cemetery walks were an especially meaningful and humbling experience for me. Walking among the graves and reading the names of people I’d never know showed me that life is much bigger than my ego. The realization that death is a necessary part of life sparked me to reevaluate and see the bigger picture behind my choices and actions.

    These cemetery walks were a powerful reminder that I would be dead one day too – but not yet – and that filled me with a sense of power and responsibility so long as I’m still breathing.

    How people think about death can have a profound effect on their psychology. Some people face the prospect of mortality by ignoring it and engaging in escapist behaviors driven by materialism (“buy more things”) or hedonism (“seek more pleasure”). Others embrace the prospect of death and recognize that it means they need to make the most of their time here before it’s too late.

    In the popular book The Top Five Regrets of the Dying: A Life Transformed by the Dearly Departing, Bronnie Ware documents her experiences in palliative care, working closely with those who had terminal illnesses or were approaching the end-of-life. She identified five main regrets of the dying based on conversations and confessions with those on their deathbeds.

    This article will outline her main findings along with my personal thoughts on each one.

    Deathbed Motivation: Top 5 Regrets of the Dying

    According to Bronnie Ware, the five most common regrets shared by people nearing death were:

    “I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.”

    It’s cliché but true: you only have one life to live.

    Many people cave to social pressures to choose paths in life that are expected of them, such as what school to attend, or what career to pursue, or what types of relationships to cultivate. However, what brings one person happiness isn’t necessarily what brings another person happiness. If we only try to make others happy, we often end up neglecting our own needs, wants, passions, and ideals.

    Understanding your core values is one of the most important steps you can take in life. Knowing what you really want will help you make choices that are harmonious with what you really care about, not just what you think you “should do” or “ought to do.” One interesting study published in the journal Emotions found that our most enduring and long-lasting regrets are usually “ideal-related,” such as personal goals and aspirations.

    Our biggest regrets are often the things we didn’t do but always wanted to, like starting a rock band, or writing a book, or traveling to a place we always wanted to visit.

    “I wish I hadn’t worked so hard.”

    Most people don’t lay on their deathbeds thinking, “I wish I spent more time at my job.”

    Work is important and it can be fulfilling, but many people in today’s world become myopically focused on advancing in their jobs/careers or making more money by any means necessary (sometimes even in unhealthy, destructive, or unethical ways).

    We wrongly believe that wealth is the only real measure of value in life, and thus we get distracted from other important things like spending more time with family, taking care of our health, giving back to our community, or pursuing personal passions.

    In our materialistic and consumerist culture, nothing seems more important than “working hard” and “making money,” but as the saying goes, “You can’t take it with you when you die.”

    “I wish I’d had the courage to express my feelings.”

    We often have trouble expressing our true feelings toward people because we see emotions as weakness or we don’t want to risk being vulnerable.

    This is especially true when it comes to feelings of love, gratitude, and appreciation. There are some families, cultures, and couples where it’s rare to hear the words, “I love you,” or “I appreciate you.” The feelings are taken for granted, but they are never explicitly said.

    It’s important that we learn to express love and appreciation toward others while we still can (including toward family, friends, loved ones, or mentors), because we will often regret it if we miss our chance.

    Recently I wrote my mom a thank you letter for her birthday. It helped me communicate a lot of feelings that I’ve always had but were difficult to say out-loud. It felt like an emotional weight was lifted off my shoulders once I finally expressed my tremendous gratitude for her and everything she’s done for me.

    There are also people I’ve lost in life whom I was never able to tell that I appreciated them. Those are regrets I’ll have to live with – the crucial lesson is don’t miss the opportunity to tell people you love them while you still can.

    “I wish I had stayed in touch with my friends.”

    One common theme in life is that relationships come and go.

    Our circle of friends often changes dramatically throughout high school, college, and into adulthood, especially when we move to new places or leave our hometowns. We tend to lose touch with people over time. Those who were once “best friends” we now go years without even speaking to.

    In theory, it’s easier to stay in touch with people now more than ever; old friends and family are just a call, text, or email away, yet we rarely take advantage of these opportunities.

    It’s never too late to check in on past connections. It can seem awkward at first to reach out to those we haven’t seen in years, but often they will appreciate the gesture and you both will enjoy reconnecting and reminiscing about your shared past.

    The simple act of checking in on people on a regular basis (such as holidays, birthdays, reunions, etc.) can preserve our social connections over time and remind us all the positive relationships and social support we have. Each person you stay in touch with is another layer of meaning in your life.

    “I wish that I had let myself be happier.”

    People are too busy these days to be happy.

    We get easily trapped in the hustle and bustle of daily life with work, school, chores, family, and other responsibilities and obligations. In the midst of all this, many forget the simple art of stepping back and finding happiness in the moment.

    You don’t need to wait for something life-changing to be happy. Many people don’t realize that happiness is in their control and you can start finding it in little things, like savoring positive experiences, counting your blessings, having things to look forward to, and prioritizing positive activities. These are habits that are available to anyone no matter what their current situation is in life. You don’t need to be rich or famous; in fact, sometimes those people are the most distracted and least happy.

    If happiness is a skill, then it’s something that’s worth learning. It isn’t magic, it’s a direct result of how you think, act, and view your world.

    The Time That Remains

    If you are reading this right now, then you still have power over how you live the rest of your life. Every new breath is a symbol of this power.

    Which of the big five regrets do you relate to the most? Living too much by other people’s expectations, focusing too much on work, not communicating your true feelings, losing touch with old friends and family, or simply not finding time for more happiness?

    These are important questions worth reflecting on. Take a moment to imagine yourself on your deathbed, which regrets would hurt the most? What can you still do about it?


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    Steven Handel

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    July 9, 2024
  • How Do I Make Sense of My Mother’s Decision to Die?

    How Do I Make Sense of My Mother’s Decision to Die?

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    My mom could always leap into the coldest water. Every summer when we visited my grandma in upstate New York, my mom dove straight into the freezing lake, even when the temperature outdoors hit the 50s. The dogs, who usually trailed her everywhere, would whine in protest before paddling after her, and the iciness left her breathless when she surfaced. “Just jump, Lil,” she’d yell to me, laughing, before swimming off to vanish into the distance.

    But I never could. I didn’t think much about that difference between us, until I flew north to be with her on the day she’d chosen to die.

    When my mom found out in May last year that she had pancreatic cancer, the surgeon and the oncologist explained to our family that cutting out her tumor might extend her prognosis by about a year; chemotherapy could tack on another six months. A few days later, my mom asked if we could spend time together in Seattle over the summer, if we could get lemonade at the coffee shop while I was there, if I wanted to play Scrabble before I left. “Yeah, of course,” I said. “But—” She interrupted me: “I’m not getting surgery.”

    After a decade of Parkinson’s disease, my mom already experienced frequent periods of uncontrolled writhing and many hours spent nearly paralyzed in bed. That illness wounded her the way losing vision might pain a photographer: Throughout her life, she had reveled in physicality, working as a park caretaker, ship builder, and costume designer. Now, plagued by a neurological disorder that would only worsen, she didn’t want to also endure postoperative wounds, vomiting from chemo, and the gloved hands of strangers hefting her onto a bedpan after surgery. Nor did she want to wait for the pain cancer could inflict. Instead, my mom said, she planned to request a prescription under Washington’s Death With Dignity Act, which allows doctors, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners to provide lethal drugs for self-administration to competent adult residents with six months or less to live.

    As a doctor myself, I’ve confronted plenty of death, yet I still found myself at a loss over how to react to my mom’s choice. I know that the American tropes of illness—“battling to the end,” “hoping for a miracle,” being “a fighter”—often do harm. In clinical training, none of us wanted to unleash the fury of modern medicine upon a 98-year-old with cancer who’d just lost his pulse, but we all inflicted some version of it: ramming his purpled breastbone against his stilled heart, sending electricity jagging through his chest, and breaching his throat, blood vessels, and penis with tubes, only to watch him die days later. I didn’t want that for my mom; I had no desire for her to cling futilely to life.

    And yet, even though it shamed me, I couldn’t deny feeling unnerved by my mom’s choice. I understood why she’d made it, but I still ruminated over alternate scenarios in which she gave chemo a shot or tried out home hospice. Though her certainty was comforting, I was also devastated about losing her, and uneasy about how soon after a new diagnosis she might die.

    My mom had made her end-of-life wishes known by the time I was in fifth grade. Our rental home still held the owners’ books, among them Final Exit, a 1991 guide for dying people to end their lives. The author dispensed step-by-step advice on how to carry out your own death, at a time when nothing like the Death With Dignity Act existed in any state. When I found the book, my mom snatched it away. But months later, after her best friend died of brain cancer, she asked if I remembered it.

    “If I ever get really sick, Lil,” she said, “I don’t plan to suffer for a long time just to die in the end anyhow. I would take my life before it gets to that point, like in that book. Just so you know.”

    Read: Why I hope to die at 75

    After her Parkinson’s diagnosis, my mom moved across the country to Washington, mostly to be near my sister, but also because in 2008, it became only the second state to approve lethal prescriptions for the terminally ill. Since then, despite much contention, the District of Columbia and eight more states have followed—including California, where I live and practice medicine. No dying patient of mine had ever requested the drugs, so I didn’t think much about the laws. Then my mom got cancer, and suddenly, the controversies ceased to be abstract.

    Proponents of aid-in-dying laws tend to say that helping very sick patients die when they want to is compassionate and justified, because people of sound mind should be free to decide when their illnesses have become unbearable. Access to lethal medications (which many recipients never end up using) lets them concentrate on their remaining life. I sympathize: I’ve seen patients who, despite palliative care, suffered irremediable existential or physical pain that they could escape only with sedating doses of narcotics.

    But I grasped the other side of the argument as well: that self-determination has limits. Aid-in-dying opponents have said that doctors who hasten death violate the Hippocratic Oath. Although I disagree with these moral objections, I do share some of the antagonists’ policy concerns. Many worry that state laws will expand to encompass children and the mentally ill, as they do in countries such as Belgium and the Netherlands. They argue that a nation that still devalues disabled people needs to invest in care, rather than permit death and open up the risk of coercion. So far, Americans who have used these laws have been overwhelmingly white and college-educated. But I could imagine patients of mine requesting death for suffering that’s been amplified by their poverty or uninsurance.

    Read: The outer limits of liberalism

    These policies are so polarizing that people can’t even agree on language. Detractors refer to “assisted suicide,” or even murder, while supporters prefer medical “aid-in-dying,” which I’ll use, because it’s less charged. But I don’t much like either term, and neither did my mom. She was already dying, so she didn’t think of her death as suicide. Nor would she accept a passive term such as aid-in-dying, when she was the one taking action. Lacking any suitable word, she settled on a phrase that felt stark but honest. “When I kill myself,” she’d say. When she killed herself, we should give her spice rack to a friend. When she killed herself, we shouldn’t hold a funeral, because that would be depressing. Her tone was always matter-of-fact. My stomach always somersaulted.

    That summer, I read constantly about aid-in-dying—accounts of its use in Switzerland, essays in American medical journals, articles written by people who’d lost a loved one that way. I was the exception in our family. My mom was concerned with bigger issues, like whether the ice-cream shop would restock the lemon flavor before she died. My sister thought I was overintellectualizing things—and she was right. Sometimes we do the only thing we know how to, to keep from falling apart.

    So I kept looking for the solace of stories that felt as complicated as my own thoughts. They were remarkably rare. To me, loving my mom meant acknowledging my own hesitation yet still respecting her measure of the unendurable. Juggling these emotions felt nuanced, but most of what I read didn’t. So many narratives cast aid-in-dying as either an abomination or the epitome of virtue, in which a dying person could be rewarded for courageous serenity with a perfect death.

    Another daughter whose mother pursued aid-in-dying spoke in a TED Talk of the “design challenge” to “rebrand” death as “honest, noble, and brave.” But however tantalizing the prospect, the promise that we can scrub death of ugliness felt dangerously dishonest. Death can be wrenching and awful no matter where and how it happens: on a ventilator in an intensive-care unit, on morphine in hospice, or with a lethal prescription at home, surrounded by family. Being able to control death doesn’t mean we can perfect it.

    Read: How to find meaning in the face of death

    The myth of the “good death”—graceful and unsullied, beatific even—has infiltrated the human subconscious since at least the 15th century, when the Ars Moriendi, Christian treatises on the art of dying, proliferated in Europe. A translation of one version counsels the sick on how to die “gladly.” The moral in these texts bludgeons you: How you die is a referendum on how you lived, with only a picturesque exit guaranteeing repose for the soul.

    The notion has seeped through generations. “I hope if I’m ever in that situation, I’d have the bravery to do that,” one friend said about my mom’s choice. “It’s good she’ll die with her dignity intact,” said another. My mom’s physicians, kind and smart people, seemed so eager to validate her decision that the aid-in-dying criteria distilled to a checklist rather than unfurling into conversation. Even the name of the law my mom intended to use, Death With Dignity, implies that planned death succeeds where other ways of dying don’t. More than half a millennium after the Ars Moriendi, we still seem to believe that you can fail at death itself.

    One doctor told us of a landscape architect who drank the fatal cocktail while exulting in her garden in full bloom. It sounded perfect—except that in all my years as a doctor, I’ve never seen a perfect death. Every time, there’s some flaw: physical discomfort, conversations left unfinished, terror, family conflict, a loved one who didn’t get there in time. Still, my sister and I tried to stage-manage a beautiful death. We booked a cabin in Olympic National Park for my mom’s exit. We would bake her famous olive bread and cook bouillabaisse. We’d wheel her to the beach, then to the towering cedar forest, then massage her feet with almond oil while we talked in front of a woodstove. The fireside conversation would be our parting exchange of gifts, full of meaning, remembrance, and closure.

    Read: The meaning of silence in conversations about death

    As our family waited for that day to come, we kept thinking we should be tearing through a bucket list. Instead, we did what we always had—cooked, played games, read. We just did it with an ever-present sense of countdown, in an apartment where nearly everything would outlive my mom: the succulent on the windowsill, the lasagna in the freezer she made us promise to eat when she was gone.

    My mom did have the lemon ice cream again, but our family never made it to the cabin in the forest. A month before the planned trip—10 weeks after my mom’s diagnosis—the pharmacy compounded the drugs: a mixture of morphine and three others. The bottle was amber, filled with dissolvable powder and labeled with the words No Refills. (“Now that would be a dark Saturday Night Live skit,” my mom told me.) The next morning, a Thursday, she called, dizzy and miserable. She wanted to die ahead of schedule, on Saturday. I got on a plane.

    My mom, my sister’s family, and I spent Friday grilling chicken and drinking good wine. After my older niece painted my mom’s nails lavender with polka dots, the kids and my brother-in-law said their goodbyes and left. The next morning, my sister and I laid out the backyard like a set: a couch swathed in blankets. Tables with plants and photos and huge candlesticks. A stereo to play the music of our childhood and her motherhood.

    But our revised choreography couldn’t erase how horrible my mom felt that morning, dispirited by her disease and deeply exhausted. We had to cajole her not to die in bed. Eventually, she came outside, where we drank peppermint tea and talked about nothing memorable. When the moment came to gulp the bottle’s contents, mixed into lemonade, she didn’t hesitate.

    “You would make the same choice if you were me, right?” she said, setting down the empty bottle. I knew she wasn’t second-guessing. She was ending her time as our mother not out of lack of devotion, but because all other options felt untenable, and she needed confirmation that we knew this.

    “Yes,” my sister said, “I would.”

    “Me too,” I said—but in truth, I didn’t know. Maybe I would have dwindled over months of chemo as I learned to reshape my life in the face of imminent death. Maybe I would have died in hospice, surrendering myself to the fog and mercy of morphine. Maybe I would have stowed the drugs in a cupboard, cradling them occasionally and then, unable to reconcile the simplicity and complexity of that ending, replacing them. Each of these paths would have demanded its own form of courage—just not my mom’s type.

    “I’ll just go to sleep now, right?” she asked.

    “Yeah, Mom, you’ll just go to sleep,” I said. “I love you.”

    My sister and I kissed her forehead, her cheeks, her collarbone. We avoided the poisonous sheen on her lips, where our tears had wet the residue of white powder.

    The aspens rustled, confetti of silver. My mom didn’t cry, and the slightest trace of a smile alighted on her face.

    “Bye,” she said. “You’ve been awesome.”

    And then she dove off the dock. Her lips blued, and when she tried to speak more, the words never surfaced.

    It took her five and a half hours to disappear completely, while my sister and I tamped down growing worries that the drugs hadn’t worked. My mom felt no pain—she couldn’t have, after all that morphine—but her passing wasn’t a fairy tale. Her suffering wasn’t embossed in meaning; she didn’t tile over her bitterness with saintly forbearance. My mom died on the day she was ready and by the means she chose. All of that matters, immensely so. She also died precipitously, far from the forest she’d dreamed of, while my sister and I were left with little closure and a prolonged, confusing death.

    Usually, I write when I’m most upset, but my mom’s death catapulted me into a frightening depth of wordlessness. Weeks passed before I realized that my problem was not that I couldn’t find words at all. It was that I couldn’t tell the tale I felt I was supposed to. In that myth, death has a metric of success, and that metric is beauty. The trouble is that you can’t grieve over a version of events that never happened. You can only grieve over the story you lived, with all of its ambiguities.

    My mom’s death was beautiful. It was also terrible, and fraught. That is to say, it was human.

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    Lindsay Ryan

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    October 23, 2023
  • Care and Comfort During Stage III or IV Breast Cancer Treatment

    Care and Comfort During Stage III or IV Breast Cancer Treatment

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    “Advanced breast cancer doesn’t have to be a journey taken alone,” says Sony Sherpa, MD, a holistic doctor in Sacramento, CA. “Thankfully, you have vast support options and resources available to you.”

    Your Doctor and Medical Team

    Many cancer centers have a system of support in place that includes your doctor and other health care professionals. Keep in mind that they can’t help if you don’t share what’s going on. To get the support you need, be open with your questions and concerns.

    “Sometimes patients don’t ask questions because they don’t want to bother their doctor or nurse, or they don’t think their questions are that important,”says Rebecca Crane-Okada, PhD, director of Cancer Navigation & Willow Sage Wellness Programs at the Margie Petersen Breast Center at Providence Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, CA. “But your doctor is really the first place to start.” 

    If your doctor or medical team doesn’t seem to listen to you or respect your questions, or you’re not confident they have enough experience with advanced breast cancer, look for a new team.

    Social Workers and Counselors

    “Social workers, psychologists, marriage and family therapists, or licensed professional counselors help with grief and loss, coping and adjustment, and family communication,” says Crane-Okada. They may also have techniques to help you with symptoms like insomnia.

    They may also help with practical things like housing, transportation, insurance, and financial aid questions. They may connect you with other resources and services, such as:

    • Financial help
    • Where and how to get a wig if you’d like one
    • Help with problems that come up at work
    • Insurance issues
    • Transportation to medical appointments

    Ask your doctor or cancer center for a referral. “Many cancer centers and hospitals now provide oncology social workers and counselors who can help you cope with the psychological, physical, and emotional impact of a cancer diagnosis,” Sherpa says.

    Spiritual Support

    Spiritual leaders and faith-based communities can offer comfort and support. They may help with practical things to make your daily life easier, like chores, meals, and transportation. They may also make you feel less alone and more supported. “A chaplain may be available to help with spiritual or religious concerns or questions,” says Crane-Okada.

    Friends and Family

    Don’t be afraid to reach out and ask for help. Friends and family often want to help, but they’re not always sure what you need or what to offer. Try to be specific about what things they can do that will make your life easier and better.

    For example, ask family and friends if they can drive you to appointments, watch your kids, help with groceries, or to simply be a shoulder to lean on.

    Support Groups and Communities

    Consider joining a support group, which may be led by an oncology social worker. They’re a great way to connect with other people going through a similar experience. They can also help you feel less alone, find valuable information, and learn new ways to cope. You can find support groups in local hospitals, cancer centers, community organizations, and online. Try the Komen Metastatic Breast Cancer group or search Facebook for metastatic breast cancer groups.

    Online Resources

    The amount and types of support you can get from nonprofit organizations and online resources is vast, Crane-Okada says. It ranges from toll-free helplines to information about your diagnosis and treatment to one-on-one counseling services you can get through teletherapy.

    Try these online resources:

    • American Cancer Society
    • National Cancer Institute
    • Patient Advocate Foundation
    • National Coalition of Cancer Survivorship
    • Cancer Support Community
    • Cancer Care
    • Cancer Net

    Palliative Care

    You can have palliative care no matter your age, type, or stage of cancer. It’s for anyone who wants to feel better, manage symptoms, and get support with non-medical needs. 

    Talk to your doctor about your palliative care options before you start treatment. Palliative care often works best when you start it right after you’re diagnosed and before treatment. If you have palliative care during treatment, you may have less severe symptoms and a better quality of life.

    Self-Care

    There’s a lot you can do to support yourself as you manage advanced breast cancer.

    Stay healthy. Eat well. Limit how much alcohol you drink. Avoid smoking. Manage stress the best you can. Stay on top of your medical checkups and tests.

    Exercise regularly. Being physically active can help you feel stronger, boost your energy, and lower stress. It may also give you a sense of accomplishment and control. Talk to your health care team to create an exercise plan that works you.

    Follow through with rehabilitation. If your doctor recommends cancer rehabilitation, you may have physical therapy, occupational therapy, pain management, nutritional planning, career counseling, or emotional counseling. These are helpful resources that can help you get more control of your life and stay independent.

    Take care of what’s on your mind. If there’s something that feels unresolved in your life, taking care of it now can give you peace of mind. Consider facing whatever it is that’s making you feel bad. Maybe you want to fix a broken relationship with a family member or friend. Maybe you’re worried about getting your will and advance directive in place. These things can weigh on your mind, so it’s helpful to take care of them if you feel up to it.

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    March 10, 2023
  • Having ‘The Talk’ with Your Doctor About Your Late-Stage NSCLC Treatment and Outlook

    Having ‘The Talk’ with Your Doctor About Your Late-Stage NSCLC Treatment and Outlook

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    Late-stage, NSCLC, treatment, outcome, palliative care, hospice care, and outlook.

































    091e9c5e820faac4091e9c5e820faac4FED-Footermodule_FED-Footer_091e9c5e820faac4.xmlwbmd_pb_templatemodule0144002/02/2021 01:57:340HTML















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    January 3, 2023
  • MDXclusive Launches as Definitive Resource for High-Quality Healthcare Grade CBD Products

    MDXclusive Launches as Definitive Resource for High-Quality Healthcare Grade CBD Products

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    As more healthcare professionals seek to counsel patients on the use of CBD as a holistic healthcare regimen, MDXclusive introduces a robust line of lab-certified topical and sublingual CBD products vetted by doctors for quality and measured for dose to allow for clear guidance on use.

    Press Release
    –

    Mar 7, 2022


    LOS ANGELES, March 7, 2022 (Newswire.com)
    –
     MDXclusive, a California-based online retailer of high-quality alternative wellness products derived from non-psychoactive hemp, has launched its first line of lab-tested topical and sublingual CBD products in a direct-to-consumer model. MDXclusive products are available for discreet delivery exclusively at www.mdxclusive.com.

    Founded by healthcare professionals, MDXclusive’s suite of products is tailored for use in reducing symptoms of inflammation, chronic pain, anxiety, and other conditions when recommended as an option by healthcare providers or for those seeking a holistic approach to health and wellness. Key attributes of MDXclusive products are measured dosage and certified lab testing by batch for both product quality and veracity of content.

    “As a healthcare professional, I know the challenges that both patients and their treatment teams face adopting the benefits of CBD for use in the care of health conditions,” said Denise Chesne, MSN, RN, founder of MDXclusive. “However, the benefits of these products are clearly changing lives, and the science continues to support the research documenting these outcomes. MDXclusive was developed to provide lab tested and quality assured products in measured dosages that will appeal to the sensibilities of healthcare professionals and patient consumers.”

    MDXclusive is founded by Mrs. Chesne, an experienced critical care nurse and advocate for the health benefits of CBD, with Mieko Hester-Perez, an independent and globally recognized autism and alternative medicine expert, who will provide product development and quality control guidance for the brand. According to Ms. Perez, “MDXclusive prioritizes a patient centered outcome approach with our products so consumers can make informed, optimal decisions with their healthcare providers.”

    MDXclusive also operates under the guidance of a Board of Advisors comprising a roster of lauded physicians seeking to ensure that safe access to CBD products from a vetted source focused on lab testing for quality and purity is assured. These independent, advising physicians include the following leaders in healthcare:

    • Dr. Paryus Patel – Corporate Chief Medical Officer for Prime Healthcare/Pulmonology, Internal Medicine, Critical Care Medicine
    • Dr. Shikrant Tamhane – Family Medicine Specialist
    • Dr. John Griffith – President and CEO Kedren Community Health Center
    • Dr. Robert B. Chesne – Cardiology
    • Dr. Emmanuel Mba – Clinical Professor, University of Southern California Obstetrics and Gynecology
    • Dr. Lee Weiss – Emergency Medicine
    • Dr. Olumuyiwa Oredugba – Nephrology, Internal Medicine

    “One of the key drawbacks to CBD as a viable option for the healthcare community is the stigma associated with its holistic wellness ambiguities,” continued Mrs. Chesne. “MDXclusive is making strides to change this reality, sourcing our products from reputable manufacturers, ensuring that every product is lab tested for both purity and content, and providing relief in discreet, single dose packaging that facilitates ease of use. Our goal is to provide confidence and certainty in the use of CBD by patients and for recommendations by healthcare leaders who see the science and want to provide relief, comfort, and benefit to those who are best served by its properties.”

    About MDXclusive:

    MDXclusive is a direct-to-consumer provider of high-quality Broad Spectrum CBD products for use with a variety of chronic pain and health conditions and anxiety, and often as a substitute for narcotics. For more information contact Denise@mdxclusive.com or to order products, please visit www.MDXclusive.com.

    Disclaimer: The statements made regarding these products have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. The efficacy of these products has not been confirmed by FDA-approved research. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. All information presented here is not meant as a substitute for or alternative to information from health care practitioners. Please consult your health care professional about potential interactions or other possible complications before using any product.

    Source: MDXclusive, LLC

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    March 7, 2022
  • Pallium Canada Appoints Jeffrey Moat as Chief Executive Officer

    Pallium Canada Appoints Jeffrey Moat as Chief Executive Officer

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    Press Release
    –


    updated: Nov 27, 2017


    OTTAWA, Ontario, November 27, 2017 (Newswire.com)
    –
    Keynote Search, a company that helps organizations with business-critical hiring needs, announced today that Jeffrey Moat was selected by the Pallium Canada Board of Directors as their new Chief Executive Officer. Moat steps into the newly formed CEO role.

    Jeff was most recently President of Partners for Mental Health (PFMH), a charitable organization renowned for its exceptional work in the mental health sector. Their programs, ‘Not Myself Today©’ and ‘Right By You’ gained critical acclaim and more than 400,000 Canadians directly benefited from the programs. Moat said of his time at PFMH, “We catalyzed more than 1 million actions by our supporters: from making mental health part of the conversation at work and at home, to changing people’s mindsets and understanding about mental illness, we have a lot to be proud of.” As Jeff steps into Pallium he remarked, “I’m excited by the opportunity Pallium has to positively impact the end of life journey for every Canadian. It is my privilege to lead the team at Pallium and work with partners and stakeholders on an issue that touches every one of us.”

    It is my privilege to lead the team at Pallium and work with partners and stakeholders on an issue that touches every one of us.

    Jeffrey Moat, CEO, Pallium Canada

    About Pallium Canada

    Pallium Canada is a not-for-profit, internationally recognized, pan-Canadian organization that has been at the forefront of developing, testing and implementing strategies to increase primary-level palliative care. The overall goal of Pallium’s work is to strengthen Canadians’ ability to provide interprofessional, home and community-based palliative care through education and support to healthcare professionals and family/neighbor carers so that every Canadian who requires palliative care will receive it early, effectively and compassionately.

    About Keynote Group

    Keynote Group, the parent company of Keynote Search was launched in September 2015 and represents many of Ottawa’s fastest growing and most iconic organizations. They have received several accolades since launching, which include two Best New Business awards and Family Enterprise of the Year. Keynote Search is a revolutionary search firm that utilizes cutting-edge AI and technology whilst providing extensive post-placement support services to ensure the success of every hire.

    “We extend our sincere thanks to James and the team at Keynote Search for their exceptional work in leading the executive team through the process,” said Gérald Savoie, Chair of the Board. “I have no doubt that Jeff is the right person to lead the growth of Pallium.”

    For Media Inquiries or for further information about Pallium’s programs, please contact Hang Tran, Communications Manager at htran@pallium.ca.

    For enquiries regarding Keynote Search and their executive search services, please contact James Baker at jbaker@keynotesearch.com.

    Source: Pallium Canada

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    November 27, 2017

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