No, you should not share a drink (or the same glass/straw) with a person undergoing chemotherapy to avoid contact with their body fluids, which may contain chemotherapy drugs.
After each chemotherapy session, the drugs may stay in your body for up to a week. During this time, very small amounts of the drugs may be released from the body in your vomit, urine (wee), faeces (poo), blood, saliva, mucus (phlegm), sweat, and semen or vaginal discharge.
For at least 48 hours after chemotherapy, all patient body fluids and waste can contain the medicine. This includes urine (pee), stool (poop), and vomit. These body fluids can be a health risk for family caregivers or others. During this time, all caregivers must follow safety precautions.
You cannot “catch” cancer from someone else. Close contact or things like sex, kissing, touching, sharing meals, or breathing the same air cannot spread cancer. Cancer cells from someone with cancer are not able to live in the body of another healthy person.
Chemo and its waste can harm or irritate skin, and may cause damage. Other people and pets could be exposed to chemo waste for a few days if they come into contact with any of your body fluids. If possible, have others use a separate toilet during this time.
It is safe to touch other people while on chemotherapy. You can hug and kiss. But you do need to protect others from coming into contact with your medicine. Follow these safety tips while taking your chemotherapy pills and for two days after you're done.
What is the 7-day rule in chemotherapy? Treatment days followed by rest days: Chemotherapy cycles may be planned in such a way that there will be 5 days of chemo with 2 days of rest, all within 7 days (roughly). Maintaining drug levels: The 7-day rule helps ensure that there is enough chemo in the body to fight cancer.
You can also visit, sit with, hug, and kiss children. If you've had SACT treatment, you can be around pregnant women. But they should not clean up your body fluids after you've had treatment. You can share a bathroom with others.
Acute exposure to body fluids or the cancer medicine itself can cause rash, nausea and vomiting, dizziness, abdominal pain, headache, nasal sores and allergic reactions.
Skin. If urine, stool, or vomit come in contact with your hands or other body parts, wash the area immediately with soap and water. If caretakers have contact with your body wastes, they should wear latex gloves.
3. If you have severe night sweats, sleep in a separate bed. “Sweating a little bit during the night is fine, but if you're getting drenching sweats that soak the sheets, you may want to sleep separately from your partner,” says Patterson. “And wash your pajamas and sheets thoroughly.”
The oncologist may plan to administer chemotherapy in cycles of 1–5 days each, with 2 days off, for a total of 7 days (7-day rule chemotherapy), or continuously for 1–5 days per session and rest for 3–4 weeks to allow the white blood cells and the body to recover and be ready for the next session.
Spicy or acidic foods: Mouth ulcers are one side effect of chemotherapy, and eating spicy foods or acidic foods can aggravate mouth sores – capsaicin found in spicy foods and acid in fruits and vegetables act as irritants.
People going through chemotherapy may carry waste in their bodily fluids for up to a few days after treatment. Due to this, family or other household members should take precautions to stay safe.
Handling Laundry
Wash your clothes or bed linens as usual unless they become soiled with chemo or body waste. Wash soiled laundry separately from other laundry items.
For a snack that will fill you up until the next meal, try to include protein along with fiber-rich fruits, vegetables, or whole grains. Low-sugar, 100% whole-grain cereals and fruit. You can pick up low-fat or non-fat milk or yogurt at a store or coffee shop to go with it.
Sometimes described as the “3-2-1-0 rule”, the original Amsterdam criteria defined HNPCC (as it was known at the time) by 3 or more individuals with pathologically confirmed colorectal cancer where one affected family member is a first-degree relative of the other 2, in at least 2 successive generations, with one ...
Clean up any splashes. Then close the toilet lid and flush twice. Wearing gloves, wash the bed pan with soap and hot water. Flush this and the rinse water into the toilet, too.
So don't be afraid to live your life as normal. You do not need to stop seeing family and friends unless they have an infection or feel unwell. You don't need to avoid crowded places unless specifically advised to do so by your healthcare team.
12 chemotherapy tips from cancer patients who've been there