June: Cancer Survivors Month

Survival is a victory — but care must continue

June is dedicated to people living with and beyond cancer. It is a month of recognition, hope and respect for every person who has faced a cancer diagnosis, completed treatment, continues treatment, or lives with cancer as a long-term condition.

Cancer survival is a major victory. However, for many people, it is not the end of the story. Life after cancer often brings a new reality: follow-up appointments, fear of recurrence, fatigue, emotional distress, changes in body image, work-related challenges, financial pressure, family adjustments and the need to rebuild everyday life with confidence and dignity.

Cancer Survivors Month reminds us that survivorship is not only about living longer. It is also about living better.

A cancer survivor is not only a person who has completed treatment and is disease-free. The term also includes people receiving maintenance treatment, people living with cancer as a chronic condition, and those who continue to experience the physical, emotional, social or economic consequences of the disease and its treatment.

In recent years, advances in early diagnosis, targeted therapies, immunotherapy, surgery, radiotherapy and supportive care have increased the number of people living many years after a cancer diagnosis. This is a major achievement for medicine, research and public health. At the same time, it creates a new responsibility: to ensure that survivorship care is organised, person-centred and accessible to all.

For many survivors, the end of active treatment is a moment of relief and gratitude. Yet it may also bring uncertainty. Some people feel that everyone around them expects them to “go back to normal”, while they are still trying to understand what has changed in their body, their emotions, their relationships and their daily life.

The fear of recurrence, anxiety before follow-up tests, persistent fatigue, pain, cognitive difficulties, changes in sexuality, emotional vulnerability and social isolation are real experiences for many people after cancer. These needs should not be underestimated. Survivors need space to speak, reliable information, access to professional support when needed, and connection with communities and organisations that understand their journey.

Long-term follow-up is also essential. Survivorship care should not focus only on recurrence. It should also include prevention, early recognition of late effects, management of treatment-related complications, support for mental health, healthy lifestyle guidance and personalised monitoring according to each person’s cancer type, treatment history, age and individual risk factors.

The message is not fear. The message is awareness, prevention and continuity of care.

Life after cancer is also about rights. It is about returning to work, accessing social benefits, understanding available services, managing financial toxicity, supporting caregivers, protecting dignity and ensuring equal access to care. Survivorship must be seen as a social, psychological and practical issue — not only a medical one.

At Kapa3, we see every day that cancer does not always end with the last treatment. It continues in the questions people ask about their rights, their next steps, their follow-up, their access to benefits, psychological support, work, family life and social reintegration.

This is why people living with and beyond cancer need holistic support. They need information, guidance, psychosocial care, access to rights and services, empowerment and continuity of care. No one should feel alone after treatment. No one should be left to navigate bureaucracy, uncertainty or lack of information without support.

Cancer Survivors Month invites us to change the way we talk about survival. We should not ask only: “Did the person survive cancer?” We should also ask:

Are they living with quality of life?
Do they have access to the care they need?
Do they know their rights?
Do they receive psychological and social support?
Can they return to work and daily life with dignity?
Is there a follow-up plan?
Is there someone to guide them when they do not know where to turn?

Cancer survival is a victory. But the real challenge is to turn this victory into a life with quality, safety, rights, support and hope.

At Kapa3, we continue to stand beside every person living with and beyond cancer. Through information, guidance, empowerment and human-centred support, we believe that care does not stop at treatment.

It continues in life.

International Volunteer Day – 5 December

Celebrating the people who give their time to make the world better

International Volunteer Day (IVD) is celebrated every year on 5 December, following a United Nations resolution that recognises the contribution of volunteers to peace, social cohesion, and sustainable development.
It is a day dedicated to acknowledging the millions of people who offer care, support, skills, and solidarity — quietly and consistently.

What volunteering means today

Volunteering goes far beyond goodwill.
It strengthens communities, bridges inequalities, supports public health systems and safety nets, and empowers people to take action where it’s needed most.

Across the world, volunteers contribute to:

  • health and patient support

  • social care and community services

  • disaster response and humanitarian aid

  • education and youth programmes

  • environmental protection and sustainability

  • advocacy for vulnerable groups

The scale of volunteering

Global landscape

According to UN Volunteers (UNV):

  • Around 862.4 million people aged 15+ volunteer every month worldwide.

  • This represents nearly 15% of the global working-age population.

  • The total global volume of volunteer work is equivalent to the labour of 109 million full-time workers.

  • Organised (formal) volunteering accounts for about 6.5%, while informal volunteering reaches 14.3% globally.

Volunteering in Greece

ILO (ILOSTAT, 2022) reports that in Greece:

  • 543,010 people engage in direct (informal) volunteering.

  • 669,712 people contribute through voluntary organisations.

These figures reflect a strong and active culture of solidarity, participation, and civic engagement across the country.

Volunteering and cancer care

In the field of cancer, volunteering plays a vital and deeply human role.
Volunteers offer:

  • practical assistance to patients and caregivers

  • support in navigating health services and rights

  • companionship during demanding procedures or appointments

  • participation in awareness and prevention activities

  • emotional support and empowerment

Their presence brings stability, trust, and hope during some of the most challenging moments in a patient’s journey.

Volunteering at Kapa3

International Volunteer Day highlights the dedication of Kapa3 volunteers and the fact that our volunteers are an essential part of our mission.
Through their contribution, they:

  • support patients and caregivers in their day-to-day needs

  • assist in awareness, prevention, and advocacy actions

  • strengthen our European programmes, research activities, and community outreach

  • bring compassion, knowledge, and willingness to every corner of our work

Thanks to them, our vision — no one should face cancer alone — becomes reality.

Become a volunteer at Kapa3

If you wish to support cancer patients and their families, contribute to your community, and become part of our mission, you can join our volunteer network.

Click here to join our volunteer team: here

On International Volunteer Day, the Kapa3 team honours those who not only give their time, care, and heart but also support patients and caregivers in countless ways.
To every volunteer: thank you for your kindness, your consistency, and your strength.
Thank you for helping us build a world of dignity and hope.

Text/Adaptation: Ifiyenia Anastasiou for Kapa3

Sources

United Nations Volunteers (UNV), State of the World’s Volunteerism Report (2022)

International Labour Organization (ILO) – ILOSTAT, Volunteer Work Statistics (Greece, 2022)

Trvst – Volunteering Facts & Global Volunteer Work Analysis