This is your Member Reference Number (MRN). You’ll need to provide this when you make an appointment with an EAP counselor or contact your EAP by phone.

Anthem provides automatic translation into multiple languages, courtesy of Google Translate. This tool is provided for your convenience only. The English language version is considered the most accurate, and in the event of a discrepancy between the translations, the English version will prevail. This translation tool is not controlled by Anthem, and the Anthem Privacy Statement will not apply. Please read Google's privacy statement. If you want Google to translate the Anthem website, select a language.

Benefits with Associate CARE Service

Your ACS offers these great resources

When a Parent Has Cancer: Teens—Finding Support

Finding Support

It may not be easy to reach out for support—but there are people who can help you. This article has tips to help you talk with your parent(s), reach out to a counselor, and/or join a support group. Read on to find out what's worked for other teens.

Tips for Talking With Your Parent

Prepare before you talk.

  • Think about what you want to say.
  • Think about how your parent might react. How will you respond to him or her?

Find a good time and place.

  • Ask your mom or dad if they have a few minutes to talk.
  • Find a private place—maybe in your room or on the front steps. Maybe you can talk while taking a walk, shooting hoops, or doing an activity you both enjoy.

Take things slowly.

  • Don't expect to solve everything right away. Difficult problems often don't have simple solutions.
  • Work together to find a way through these challenges. Some conversations will go better than others.

Keep it up.

  • Don't think you have to have just one big conversation. Have lots of small ones.
  • Make time to talk a little each day if you can, even if it's just for a few minutes.

Talking With a Counselor

Sometimes, talking to friends or family is not enough. When you're having a hard time, it can be helpful to talk with a counselor or social worker .Going to a counselor shows you have the courage to see that you need help to get through a very tough time.

Why go to a counselor?

Teens say it can be helpful to talk with someone outside the family—someone who doesn't take sides. A counselor is a person who will listen to you. They will help you find ways to better handle the things that bother you and gain strength in your situation.

Finding a Counselor

  • Talk with your mom, dad, or someone else that you trust. Let them know you would like to talk to a counselor. Ask for help making appointments and getting to visits. Sometimes the counselor will even let you bring a friend.
  • Ask a nurse or social worker at the hospital if they know someone you can talk to.
  • Talk with your guidance counselor at school.

Don't be shy about asking for help.

You may think, “I can solve all my own problems.” However, when faced with tough situations, both teens and adults need support from others!

Joining a Support Group

Another good outlet is a support group. Some groups meet in person; others meet online. Some groups go out and have fun together. In these groups you'll meet other teens going through some of the same things that you are. At first this may not sound like something you want to do. Other teens say they thought the same thing—until they went to a meeting. They were surprised that so many others felt the same way they did and had advice that really seemed to work. A doctor, nurse, or social worker can help you find a support group.

National Cancer Institute. (2012, February). Finding support (p.37). In When your parent has cancer: A guide for teens (Chapter 7). Retrieved February 2, 2015, from http://www.cancer.gov

More about this Topics

  • Disaster Anniversaries and Trigger Events

  • Coping After Trauma: When to Ask for Help

  • Choices for Care When Treatment May Not Be an Option

  • Surviving Survivor Guilt

  • Maintain a Healthy State of Mind: Seniors (Part 2)

Other Topics

    • Survivor's Guilt—Making it Through the War
    • Self-Care: Remaining Resilient
    • Will There Be a Couch? What to Expect From Counseling
    • Building Resilience Muscles
    • Understanding Resilience
    • What Terminal Patients Really Want
    • Grieving the Loss of an Adult Sibling
    • Guidelines for Student or Staff Sudden Death (Part 2)
    • Miscarriage and Stillbirth
    • Being Supportive to Someone Who Has Experienced Trauma
    • When a Parent Has Cancer: Taking Care Of Yourself—Teens