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Basic Information About Chemotherapy
How Chemotherapy Treatments Are Given
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Chemotherapy Form
Chemotherapy comes in two forms:
- a pill
- a liquid that enters the body through a needle in a vein (intraveneously). (Those clear plastic bags of liquid that hang on a pole that we see on every t.v. show that takes place in a hospital).
Chemotherapy injections are given in a private foctor's office, in a hospital, or in a cancer center.
Intraveneous chemotherapy is given in cycles. For example, a dose may be given 5 days a week for a few weeks, then a few weeks without, then more weeks with chemo. Or it may be given once a week for a number of weeks, etc. The time off gives your body a chance to recover between treatments. A full course of chemo could be a few months, or 12 months, or longer or shorter depending on the spefic situation.
While pills may be more convenient because they can be taken anywhere, they may not be treated the same by your health insurance company as chemotherapy given intraveneously. Chemo given intraveneously is covered like a treatment. Chemo given in pill form may be treated like a drug which means you pay a larger share of the cost.
Chemotherapy: How Intraveneous Chemotherapy Is Given
Chemotherapy is given in a health facility such as a hospital or outpatient facility.
Before giving the dose, a nurse will draw your blood to check whether the treatment to date has affected the blood-producing cells in your bone marrow or the function of your liver. If the results are okay, the nurse will start the intraveneous line (IV) through which the drug will be injected.
If the blood results are not okay, your oncologist may lower the dose or postpone the treatment.
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