Key points about going home from hospital after your child's treatment
- going home for the first time after diagnosis can be an especially stressful time
- help is available from support groups and the nursing and medical staff at Starship or CHOC and your local hospital
Help available after your child's cancer treatment
When your child is getting ready to go home from hospital, feelings of excitement can be mixed with feelings of anxiety for everyone in the whānau. Going home for the first time after diagnosis can be an especially stressful time because the situation is new.
After your child goes home, help is available from support groups like the Child Cancer Foundation and the nursing and medical staff at Starship or CHOC and your local hospital.
Check out the links for more information and support.
Childhood Cancer - More Information & Support
Continuing care after hospital cancer treatment
If your family lives in Christchurch or Auckland, the healthcare team where your child was a patient will continue providing your child's care.
If your family does not live in Christchurch or Auckland, the local hospital staff and the Starship or CHOC team will share your child's continuing care.
Before your child with cancer leaves hospital
'Discharge meeting'
Write down any questions from anyone in the whānau. Ask for a 'discharge meeting', especially if you are going home for the first time. Take your questions to the meeting and ask the healthcare team to discuss them. Consider having more than one whānau member go to this meeting.
Go through the pre-discharge checklist with your child's nurse. Make sure to talk to the nurse or your child's doctor if there is anything you need more information about.
Go through this checklist before leaving hospital to make sure you've covered everything.
Checklist Before Leaving Hospital
Important contacts
Check the quick help guide for a list of important contacts for your child with cancer. You might want to print it and then fill it out with the names and phone numbers you need.
Quick Help Guide For Parents Of Child Cancer Patients
Safe handling of cytotoxic medicines
If your child is to be taking chemotherapy medicine at home, or has had chemotherapy within the 48 hours before leaving hospital, see the advice about how to safely handle cytotoxic medicines and the related wastes.
Which activities your child can do
Speak to your child's doctor about the physical activities your child should avoid and the activities that are safe.
Getting advice after your child with cancer leaves hospital
After leaving hospital, you can get advice and reassurance by phoning your healthcare team whenever there is any worry or concern.
Phone the healthcare team for advice if your child is receiving chemotherapy and has any of the things listed in the section below.
When to seek medical advice for your child with cancer
You always need medical advice and your child may need medical attention if your child is having chemotherapy and any of these things happen:
- your child has a temperature over 38 degrees Celsius
- there is bleeding from the nose, gums or mouth or unexplained bruising or blood in your child's poo, wee or vomit
- there has been close contact with a person who has chickenpox, shingles or measles
- your child has difficulty eating or drinking
- your child has difficulty doing wee or has not had a wee for 6 hours
- your child has been unable to poo for 3 days
- your child has had vomiting or diarrhoea for more than 6 hours
- your child has a skin rash
Safety measures with chemotherapy medicine at home
Chemotherapy by mouth
Some tamariki (children) will continue taking chemotherapy medicine by mouth (either tablets or liquid) when they are at home.
Chemotherapy into a vein
Some tamariki, when they are at home, will go to the hospital day stay area or outpatient clinic to have chemotherapy into a vein (intravenous). Then they return home straight after.
Safety when handling chemotherapy medicine
Because chemotherapy medicines are toxic, when you are home you need to protect yourself and others when you are handling or exposed to them.
Chemotherapy medicines pass out of the body in:
- wee
- vomit
- poo
- blood
Anyone who could be exposed to these body substances also needs protection from possible contamination. This applies during treatment and for up to 48 hours after finishing treatment.
You will receive advice from your treatment centre about safely handling chemotherapy medicines and related waste at home.
See the frequently asked questions about care for your child with cancer at home.
Frequently Asked Questions About Care For Your Child With Cancer At Home
Tips for giving medicine to your child with cancer
You could use rewards such as star charts and bravery beads to encourage your child to take medicine if it is unpleasant.
Try using an oral syringe to make it easier to measure the medicine.
If your child vomits within 30 minutes of taking a medicine, phone the healthcare team for advice about repeating the dose.
Look for tips for giving specific medicines on your medicine information sheets. Phone the healthcare team to discuss any problems.
Acknowledgements
All the pages in the childhood cancer section of this website have been written by health professionals who work in the field of paediatric oncology. They have been reviewed by the members of the National Child Cancer Network (NZ). Medical information is authorised by the clinical leader of the National Child Cancer Network.