Composite story drawn from real patterns about being the partner who drives, sits, waits, and witnesses cancer treatment. What works in the chair, what backfires, and what the seven-hour infusion days actually need from the person sitting next to the patient.
The husband, partner, or close friend at the chemo chair has one job that’s bigger than the dozens of small jobs: be present without being a project. Bring snacks. Hand the water bottle. Watch their face for the moment they want quiet vs the moment they want company. Don’t try to be cheerful. Don’t try to make it easier than it is. Below: what real partners describe as having helped, drawn from ACS Caregiver guidance and survivor accounts.
The structure of an infusion day
Per ACS’s overview of receiving chemo, a typical infusion day involves: arrival 30 min early, lab draws, premedication (anti-nausea + steroids, ~30-60 min), the actual chemo drugs (1-6 hours depending on regimen), and a flush. Total: 3-7 hours in chair. The partner is there for most of it.
Five things that work at the chair
Bring snacks for both of you
Patient may not eat (anti-nausea meds suppress appetite); you will. Cafeteria at most cancer centers is bleak. Pack: crackers, cheese, ginger candies, fruit. The patient sometimes wants a bite of yours.
Watch their face, not your phone
Most partners describe getting good at reading what the patient needs without asking. Drowsy → quiet. Tense → distraction. Bored → conversation. The 90% on your phone, 10% present pattern is the most common partner failure.
Hand the water bottle without asking
The patient’s IV-side hand is restricted. Reaching for water from a side table is harder than it looks. Refilling the bottle from the cooler is your job. Doing it without being asked saves both of you the conversation.
Take notes on what the nurse says
Patient won’t remember, especially after premeds. The nurse will mention symptoms to watch for, when to call, when the next appointment is. Write it on your phone. Send a copy to the patient that evening.
Drive home in silence if they want it
Most patients are exhausted at the end. The drive home is not the conversation moment. Music, podcast, or quiet — let them choose. The conversation can happen tomorrow.
— recurring sentiment in ACS caregiver guidance
What backfires
- Constant cheerleading. “You’ve got this!” said every 20 minutes. Becomes exhausting to receive.
- Comparing to other patients. “That guy looks worse than you” lands as someone else’s pain being currency.
- Asking the nurse questions the patient was about to ask. Lets the patient lose authority over their own care. Nudge them to ask, don’t substitute for them.
- Bringing work for yourself. Laptop open, calls happening — partners describe this as one of the most common things they regret. The chair is not a co-working space.
- Negotiating with the medical team about treatment. Not your call. Stay supportive; let the patient and the oncologist run the conversation.
The week between infusions
The chair is one piece. The week between is its own thing — different needs at different days. Pattern most partners describe:
| Day after infusion | What the patient typically needs |
|---|---|
| Day 1 (steroid energy) | Watch out for over-doing — they may seem fine and crash later |
| Day 2-3 | Worst nausea/fatigue. Soft food. Quiet. Bathroom-close presence. |
| Day 4-5 | Tired but functional. Short walks help. Reduce visitors. |
| Day 6-10 | Most-functional days of the cycle. Schedule whatever needs to happen here. |
| Day 11-13 (next infusion approaching) | Anxiety can climb. Be a steady presence; don’t add stress. |
What to bring for the partner side
Recovery clothing is for the patient. The partner has their own infusion-day kit: a charged power bank, an extra phone charger (yours and theirs), a book or downloaded podcast, snacks for you that don’t smell. Inspired Comforts’ chemo collection for the patient side; the rest of the kit is yours to assemble.
Frequently asked questions
Sources
- American Cancer Society — Getting Chemotherapy · Caregiver Resource Guide
- National Cancer Institute — Family Caregivers in Cancer
- Department of Labor — FMLA








