Access detailed search options for content from the Clinical Journal of Oncology Nursing & Oncology Nursing Forum below.
What is normal cell biology? Why do normal cells become cancer cells? How do new molecular and targeted therapies target cancer? How do gene and vaccine therapies work? Find answers to these questions and more while gaining a better understanding of cancer and its treatments
Discover what you can learn about breast cancer in our online learning library. Explore resources curated from ONS content and offerings, such as books, courses, clinical practice resources, and articles.
Learn about the process, risks, monitoring needs, and potential side effects of CAR T-cell therapy treatment of hematologic malignancies, with an emphasis on patient and family education. An interactive scenario and supporting resources reinforce learning.
As the oncology field changes, our nursing interventions must change with it. Update your breast cancer knowledge on topics like genomic testing, biosimilars, clinical trials, new treatment options, cardio-oncology and much more with the Breast Cancer: Staying Up to Date online course.
The Oncology Nursing Society has compiled a library of a variety of resources to help inform nurses about nursing staffing and care delivery models.
The drug reference sheets in ONS Voice are a quick guide to newly approved therapies or drugs with new indications. This resource from ONS clinical staff provides information through a nursing lens and includes the drug’s indication, side-effect profile, nursing considerations, patient education talking points, and more.
This course provides foundational knowledge on the basic principles of cancer and the evaluation and diagnosis of cancer for the advanced practice provider.
Evidence-based practice (EBP) is foundational to nursing and can improve patient outcomes. It uses a process of shared decision-making that incorporates the best available evidence, clinical expertise, and patient preferences and values. Nurses and other healthcare providers at the point of care are in an ideal position to ask and answer clinically relevant questions to promote quality, safety, and best-possible outcomes.
The onboarding process is critical to ensure oncology nurses feel ready to deliver quality cancer care to people with cancer. ONS has developed orientation-based didactic courses, clinical practice resources, and other training tools to use to ensure optimal orientation for nurses new to the clinical and advanced practice roles. Whether you are working to improve your institution’s onboarding process or looking for individual resources to complement your own orientation, ONS has an option for you within the Orientation Learning Library.