
Modern cancer care rarely talks about intimacy. We do. Cancer & Intimacy delivers honest reflections, practical guides, resources, and more for navigating desire, touch, and closeness during treatment, through recovery, and beyond.
| Platform | Pricing | Only free issues | Publishes | Monthly | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Issues | 8 | Founded | 10 months ago | Last Issue | a month ago |
| Active | |||||

Cancer treatment changes the body in ways that can be unpredictable and are often only discussed in medical terms. Patients are informed about surgical outcomes, treatment side effects, recovery timelines, and long-term risks. What receives...
When a cancer diagnosis hits, your relationship is instantly thrown into survival mode. Almost overnight, the dynamic shifts. You are no longer just romantic partners; you are thrust into the rigid, heavy roles of “patient” and “caregiver”....
Many people are told to expect changes to their body after cancer. What they are less prepared for is how much those changes can affect their sense of who they are.
It is often described as a body image issue, and on the surface, it can ce...
At some point after cancer, many people have a quiet realization they weren’t prepared for.
The sex they used to be able to have is gone.
Cancer and Intimacy's Substack is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support m...
It’s heard all the time in cancer support settings—sometimes spoken aloud, sometimes whispered like a confession:
“I just want things to go back to normal.”
I understand the longing behind that sentence. I really do. When your life has be...
Subscribers, engagement, traffic and sponsorship for Cancer and Intimacy's Substack.
| Subscribers | Engagement | 62 | Monthly Web Visits | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accepts Sponsors | Estimated Cost per Ad | ||||
The writers behind this newsletter.
Cancer and Intimacy explores connection, desire, body image, and more during and after cancer. Here you'll find tools, reflections, and resources for patients, partners, and providers who believe healing must include intimacy.
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