Video Library

Tonya Edwards, MS, MSN
Tonya Edwards, MS, MSN, Family Nurse Practitioner, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Supportive Care Department, advises providers to enroll in a national pharmacy database prescription monitoring program and to educate patients about their medications and the ways in which they must be used.
Rachel Swerdloff
Rachel Swerdloff of Mend Together (formerly Mend After Cancer) explains how her organization supports patients with cancer by helping people create registries for items and services that they may need during and after treatment.
A message from our Program Director Sharon Gentry to the AONN+ community and all the healthcare workers working tirelessly to save lives during the COVID-19 outbreak.
AONN+ conferences are a prime opportunity for oncology navigators, administrators, and social workers to connect, exchange ideas, and make long-lasting professional relationships.
Sage Bolte, PhD, LCSW
Sage Bolte suggests a number of resources for oncology professionals to leverage when speaking with their patients about sexuality.
Sage Bolte, PhD, LCSW
Sage Bolte reiterates a number of talking points that she believes navigators should be addressing with their patients regarding sexuality, stressing that the conversation, while uncomfortable, is important.
Sage Bolte, PhD, LCSW
Sage Bolte addresses some common misconceptions around sexuality and cancer, including the perceptions that certain demographics are less burdened than others by how a cancer diagnosis or treatment affects sexuality and intimacy.
Sage Bolte, PhD, LCSW
Sage Bolte provides an overview of a number of common sexual side effects of cancer treatments, and suggests measures that patients can take to cope with them.
Sage Bolte, PhD, LCSW
Sage Bolte stresses that it's important as a navigator not to make assumptions to foster trust with your patients, and cites ways to be inclusive when working with patients in the LGBTQI community.
Sage Bolte, PhD, LCSW
Sage Bolte believes the approach to discussing sexuality with men versus women should always be the same, and it's only the information that changes.