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Medication management

Medication Management

Taking medications on time and as prescribed is one of the most important parts of recovery after transplant. With multiple medications, changing schedules, and side effects, it can feel overwhelming---but there are tools and strategies that can help.

Why It Matters

  • Medications support engraftment, prevent infection, GVHD and manage side effects from transplant
  • Missing doses or incorrect timing can lead to complications or setbacks
  • Some medications are time-sensitive or interact with food, so routines matter

Common Side Effects

Patients may experience:

  • Nausea or vomiting
  • Hair loss
  • Taste changes
  • Lightheadedness
  • Water retention

Encourage your care team to discuss side effects as well as rare complications

🔍Common Myths

Myth

You'll be sick all the time

Reality

While side effects like vomiting and fatigue are common, many patients still find ways to feel better and enjoy being outside the hospital.

💡Tips

Use a calendar or weekly pillbox to stay organized

Try a hospital app to track doses and set reminders

Ask if liquid forms are available---some pills can be crushed or cut

Use creative strategies like mixing meds with pudding or applesauce to ease swallowing fatigue

Build a weekly template---meds often change day to day, so having a visual plan helps

🩺Questions to Ask Your Care Team

Bring these to your next appointment

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What medications can help with nausea or other side effects?

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Can I consolidate pharmacies to simplify refills?

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Are there flavoring options for liquid medications?

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What forms are available---pills, liquids, gummies?

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Can any medications be given through my central line?

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Are there alternatives if I have allergies or trouble swallowing?

💬What I Wish I'd Known

From families who've been there

Allergies can affect medication choices---share your full history

Some meds may be administered through your central line---ask what's possible

PharmDs (clinical pharmacists) can coordinate across hospitals to find safe alternatives

It's okay---and important---to advocate during rounds: ask about routes, forms, flavors, and timing

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