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Comfort packs for cancer patients

The best present for someone with cancer is your time, says Gina Benjamin, but there are many things you can do to help

October 26, 2017 13:30
Dr Shara Cohen with a Cancer Care Parcel

ByGina Benjamin, gina benjamin

3 min read

Dr Shara Cohen has long been involved in the world of medicine — in fact, her brother’s rare disease prompted her to train as a scientist in the hope of finding a cure. She is a committee member of FDUK, a charity that supports families who have members with familial dysautonomia, a rare disease occurring only in Ashkenazi Jews. She also has a niece with a rare genetic disease and has founded a charity, Rarecare UK, in response. But in 2013, her career took an unexpected turn. She was working on working on the effects of cord blood as an alternative for stem cells for transplantation when she was diagnosed with breast cancer.

“People didn’t know what to say to me,” she says. “Some people avoided me completely and one even said ‘I wish you hadn’t told me’. I was thrown into a whirlwind of hospital visits, tests and discussions, with little time to step back and think about what I actually needed to make day-to-day life.

“When I went into hospital, people were generous and brought me lots of gifts. I was grateful but it felt strange. It wasn’t my birthday or Chanucah and I didn’t want to be pampered. I wanted to get on with being treated and needed things that would help me on my way. But I understood. If you’ve never had cancer, how can you know what’s needed? And that’s why I founded Cancer Care Parcel.”

Her website offers gifts for people with cancer, whether just diagnosed, going through treatment, or convalescing. There are special boxes for children, women and men, as well as various themed boxes. “The parcels are carefully considered,” says Cohen. “Not only do they provide practical help for those going through treatment but they also give loved ones an ideal way to reach out to someone who’s just been diagnosed, when they might not know exactly what to say. It’s a different way to say ‘I’m thinking of you’ and to show you do care even if you can’t find the right words.”