Read on to find out more about the topic of driving yourself home after chemotherapy.
Side Effects of Chemo
Your healthcare provider will tell you that the side effects of chemotherapy can affect judgment, motor skills, and vision. These include such common symptoms as fatigue, nausea, and vomiting, which not only affect your desire to drive but also your concentration and alertness.
Your judgment may be affected by symptoms like:
Fatigue: You don’t always make the best decisions when you’re tired. Mood changes: Chemo can affect a person’s mood, which can impact judgment. Chemo brain: You may be “spacey” or forget things easily, which can also dull judgment
Your motor skills may be affected due to:
Fatigue: Fatigue can slow down reaction time and physical responses; cancer-related fatigue is very different than “regular” fatigue. Chemo brain: It may take you longer to remember how to do something. Nausea: When you’re nauseous, even your movements can be affected because you feel so horrible. Peripheral neuropathy: Tingling or numbness in your hands or feet may impact your ability to drive.
Some people receiving chemo also experience changes to their vision, including blurred or double vision. These vision changes can seriously impact your driving ability.
If you are on any pain medications, drowsiness may also be a concern. Drowsiness decreases your response time and can even cause you to fall asleep at the wheel. Altering dosing schedules, or even changing medications, can sometimes help alleviate the problem. Ask your provider if the chemotherapy has fatigue or drowsiness as a side effect.
In most cases, your healthcare provider will ask you to get a ride home after your first session to see how you will tolerate the chemo. If you feel well the first time, they say that driving home for future sessions is okay.
Making Contingency Plans
If you find that you cannot drive to and from your chemotherapy sessions, you may want to consider taking a taxi, public transportation, or asking a friend to chauffeur you. If none of these options are available, contact your local American Cancer Society (ACS), and they can refer you to local patient transportation services.
The ACS offers a volunteer program called Road to Recovery, which provides transportation assistance to those undergoing chemo. The Society’s online support locator allows you to search by zip code (or city and state) and select the services you need.
Summary
Chemotherapy can affect different people in different ways. Wanting to maintain independence is natural, but it may not always be possible to drive independently to and from treatment. There are options that you can utilize rather than drive yourself. Ask your healthcare provider whether it’s safe to drive after chemotherapy treatments.
A Word From VeryWell
Wanting to maintain independence as you go through chemotherapy is understandable. Before chemotherapy starts, speak with your healthcare provider or treatment team about driving yourself to and from chemo. The treatment center might have rules about transportation to and from chemotherapy. Their advice might vary depending on the kind of chemotherapy you are having.