For caregivers
Supporting someone through cancer
Caring for a person with cancer is a role most people step into without warning or training. These guides cover the practical work, the emotional weight, and the seasons of caregiving — in plain language, grounded in National Cancer Institute resources.
Worth saying up front: taking care of yourself is not selfish — it is what makes the rest possible. If you read only one thing today, make it the burnout guide.
Start with the basics
What caregiving involves, how roles change, and how to set yourself up for the months ahead.
Protect yourself
Caregivers who last are the ones who take their own health seriously from the start.
Support the whole family
Cancer in the family touches everyone — including the youngest members.
When cancer is advanced
Gentle, honest guidance for the hardest season — comfort, hospice, and planning ahead.
- Caring for Someone at the End of LifeComfort, hospice timing, and when to call for help.
- What Is Hospice Care?What hospice includes and how it differs from palliative care.
- Making Future PlansAdvance directives, paperwork, and honoring wishes.
- Palliative CareSymptom relief at any stage — not only at the end of life.
Practical support
Money, work, and logistics affect caregivers too.
More ways in
Follow the “Caring for someone” learning path for a guided reading order, browse all caregiver articles, or send encouragement with a support e-card.