Cancer treatment can be tough on your body and your mind. Prehab gives you small, manageable steps to help you feel more in control and better equipped for what’s ahead.
Prehab can help you:
- Improve your strength and fitness
- Manage tiredness and stress
- Feel more confident and prepared for what’s ahead
- Support your body to cope better with treatment
- Begin to move past your cancer treatment
What Does Prehab Involve?
Prehab is personalised to you, but usually includes.
- Safe, guided exercise to build strength and energy
- Nutrition advice to support your body
- Emotional and wellbeing support to help you feel grounded and confident
- Simple lifestyle tools you can use every day
What Is Rehabilitation?
Cancer rehabilitation is designed to support them after treatment ends, when many individuals can feel suddenly “discharged but not done.”
Once hospital appointments reduce and active treatment finishes, it’s common for people to feel lost, uncertain, or without a clear roadmap for what comes next. Physical side effects, emotional changes, and the challenge of adjusting to a new version of everyday life can make this transition difficult.
Our rehabilitation programme bridges that gap.
We provide structured, personalised support to help you move safely and confidently into the next stage of life—whether you are living with cancer or recovering after treatment. Our specialist‑trained coaches guide you in building self‑management skills that promote strength, independence, vitality, and overall wellbeing.
Through safe physical activity, lifestyle guidance, and compassionate coaching, we help you:
- Rebuild strength and stamina
- Improve confidence and daily functioning
- Manage long‑term or late‑onset side effects
- Understand your body and your new needs
- Create healthy habits that sustain you for the long term
- Enhance overall quality of life
Cancer rehabilitation is about more than recovery – it’s about helping you live well, with the tools, knowledge, and support you need to navigate life during and after cancer.