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Our highly trained specialists are available 24/7 via phone and on weekdays can assist through online chat. We connect patients, caregivers, and family members with essential services and resources at every step of their cancer journey. Ask us how you can get involved and support the fight against cancer. Some of the topics we can assist with include:
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Survivorship care focuses on the long-term wellbeing of individuals with a history of cancer and cancer treatment. As you and your child work with your cancer care team on a transition plan, here are some things to keep in mind that might be helpful.
During treatment, most parents and caregivers are focused on getting through each day. After treatment, priorities shift as you and your child try to get back to a life that doesn’t revolve around cancer.
Many parents and caregivers are surprised by some of the feelings they experience when cancer treatment is finally over. You might have gotten used to the cancer care team, appointments, tests, medicines, and phone calls. You might have had family and friends supporting you with rides, meals, or other tasks.
People often assume everything should be great now that treatment has ended. However, many people report feeling lost or even abandoned. These feelings are common, normal, and nothing to be ashamed of.
Ask your child’s cancer care team for a treatment summary. This document includes information about your child’s cancer and treatment that their health care team and other doctors might need to know in the future. Keep this treatment summary somewhere safe and share with any new doctors your child might see. When your child is an adult, they should also keep these records and share them with their doctors.
Your child’s treatment summary should include:
Learn more about this in Keeping Copies of Important Medical Records.
One thing that can help minimize the stress of transitioning from treatment to survivorship is establishing a clear survivorship care plan with your child’s cancer care team at the end of treatment.
Survivorship care focuses on the long-term wellbeing of individuals with a history of cancer and cancer treatment. This might be with some of the cancer care team your child had before, or it might be with a clinic or team focused on long-term care of childhood cancer survivors. Survivorship care might also be called long-term or follow-up care.
Survivorship care will often include:
Each child’s survivorship plan may differ depending on their type of cancer and cancer treatment.
Most pediatric cancer centers will provide a survivorship care plan at the end of treatment. Each cancer facility has its own version of a survivorship plan, but you can see some examples of plans created by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
The Children’s Oncology Group (COG) is the world’s largest group of cancer doctors and health providers for children and teens. They offer a free online resource for parents of childhood cancer survivors called the Passport for Care.
COG has also developed long-term follow-up guidelines based on the best research and evidence for children and teens who have been treated for cancer. These guidelines go into more detail on how to prevent, recognize, and manage late and long-term effects of cancer treatments.
To learn more, ask your doctors about the COG survivor guidelines. You can also find them online at www.survivorshipguidelines.org. The guidelines are written for health care professionals, but patient versions of some of the guidelines are available, too (as “Health Links”).
Cancer rehabilitation (rehab) is another support resource for childhood cancer survivors. Rehab can help with the long-term effects of cancer and cancer treatment that don’t go away after treatment ends. The main goals of cancer rehab are to:
Learn more about the specific ways cancer rehabilitation can help survivors of childhood cancer after treatment.
Here are some additional questions you might want to ask your child’s cancer care team if they aren’t answered in your child’s survivorship care plan:
Learn about the possible late and long-term side effects of childhood cancer treatment.
The American Cancer Society medical and editorial content team
Our team is made up of doctors and oncology certified nurses with deep knowledge of cancer care as well as editors and translators with extensive experience in medical writing.
Bhatia S, Tonorezos ES, Landier W. Clinical care for people who survive childhood cancer: a review. JAMA. 2023;330(12):1175–1186. Accessed September 28, 2023. doi:10.1001/jama.2023.16875
Children’s Oncology Group. Long-term follow-up guidelines for survivors of childhood, adolescent, and young adult cancers. Version 5.0. Updated October 2018. Accessed September 29, 2023. http://www.survivorshipguidelines.org/
National Comprehensive Cancer Network. (2023). Adolescent and young adult (AYA) oncology. (Version 2.2024). https://www.nccn.org/guidelines/nccn-guidelines/guidelines-detail?category=4&id=1412. Accessed October 9, 2023.
NCCN Guidelines for Patients. (2020). Survivorship care for cancer-related late and long-term effects. https://www.nccn.org/guidelines/nccn-guidelines/guidelines-detail?category=patients&id=54. Accessed October 11, 2023.
NCCN Guidelines for Patients (2020). Survivorship care for healthy living. (Version 2020). https://www.nccn.org/patients/guidelines/content/PDF/survivorship-hl-patient.pdf. Accessed October 11, 2023.
National Cancer Institute. Care for childhood cancer survivors. Updated September 2021. Accessed September 29, 2023. https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/coping/survivorship/child-care
Last Revised: February 3, 2025
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