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Supportive Cancer Care: A Community Lifeline

Maine, USASunday, June 14, 2026

People who fight cancer often feel that the battle is just about medicine, but the truth is it touches every part of life.

In many rural parts of Maine, patients and their families must learn to cope with this struggle mostly on their own.

A different way of caring, called supportive cancer care, treats the whole person—not only the disease.
It adds:

  • Counseling
  • Financial help
  • Pain control
  • Practical support such as rides to appointments or insurance guidance

The Dempsey Center in Maine offers all of these services at no charge, thanks to donors who believe everyone deserves help.


The Dempsey Challenge

Each year the Dempsey Challenge brings together thousands of runners and volunteers who raise money so that no Mainer has to face cancer alone.

The state backs this approach too, covering palliative care through its insurance plan and even creating special license plates that fund research and support programs.


The Gap Nationwide

Yet nationwide, only a few patients get these kinds of services, even when they exist.
Many people do not know they can ask for them or think they are too expensive, so the load stays on families.

  • Strengthening local networks
  • Spreading awareness

are essential steps to make supportive care a standard part of treatment.


Advocacy in Action

The Dempsey Center joined a national campaign that tells patients and doctors alike that this care is essential, not optional.
Last month they met with lawmakers to push for broader access and to make sure every patient can request the help they need.

Research shows that when supportive care is available, patients feel better, stay healthier, and avoid unnecessary emergency visits.


What You Can Do

  • Ask your doctors about supportive options.
  • Advocate for more services in your area.
  • Volunteer or donate to local programs.

Together we can build a system where no one has to face cancer alone.

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