How Cold Weather Affects Cancer Patients

Winter can be hard for many people, but for cancer patients, slippery streets, and cold weather are more than a hazard; they can also be a health risk. Learn how cold weather affects cancer patients and how they can stay safe during the winter.

Hypothermia in Cancer Patients

Hypothermia is a condition where the human body begins to lose heat faster than it can produce it, causing the body temperature to become dangerously low. Side effects of cancer treatment, such as fatigue, dehydration and anemia, can make patients more susceptible to hypothermia.

Frostbite in Cancer Patients

Some treatments can cause peripheral neuropathy, which carries numbness in the extremities as a potential side effect. Patients who have peripheral neuropathy are more likely to get frostbite since they can’t feel how cold their fingers and hands are in cold weather.

Falls in Cancer Patients

Patients can have a higher risk of fracture if they are receiving treatments that affect bone density. Cancer patients need to be especially careful if they have thrombocytopenia, a condition associated with blood cancers that cause low platelet counts. Since platelets help blood clot, a low count can mean that bruising or serious bleeding can happen when injured.

Patients who have numbness in their feet (neuropathy) are also more prone to falls.

Flu in Cancer Patients

Cancer therapy may weaken patients’ immune systems. It is necessary that they get their flu shot since they don’t have enough white blood cells to fight infections. This is why cancer patients have a higher chance of having complications from the flu than a healthy person.

Tips for Cancer Patients to Stay Safe During Winter

Follow these tips to protect your health or a loved one in winter and stay safe:

  • Stay inside as much as you can when temperatures are freezing or when low temperatures are accompanied by rain or high winds.
  • Make sure your walkways are always cleared of ice and snow.
  • If you need to go outside, make sure to bundle up in layers. Put on a hat that covers your ears, especially if therapy has caused you to lose your hair. Wear heavy gloves, thick socks, and warm boots with good treads.
  • Protect your skin. Therapy can make your skin itchy, dry and cracked, especially when the humidity level drops. Use lip balm and moisturizers regularly and avoid long, hot showers and baths. Consider getting a humidifier.
  • Stay hydrated and drink plenty of non-caffeinated liquids regularly.

If you’d rather avoid winter and the risks it carries for cancer patients, you can always consider health tourism. It’s the practice of traveling to a popular tourist destination with the purpose of receiving therapeutic treatment. For example, Florida has mild, pleasant winters, which make it an ideal location for “health tourism!”

Winter won’t last forever, even if you sometimes feel that way, so celebrate each sunny day!

More than a thousand men and women diagnosed with cancer each year turn to our trusted team of cancer specialists. We encourage you to call us, ask us a question, or consult with us to get a second opinion so you, too, can experience the difference.