Itching: Information for patients and carers

This information is sourced fromĀ Dr Tony Duffy:

Itching can affect all of your body or only one area.

Itching may be due to:

  • dry skin
  • chemicals released by cancer (especially some cancers of the blood)
  • medication (such as the painkillers morphine and diamorphine)
  • jaundiceĀ 
  • kidney and liver problems

Anything that causes increased blood flow to the skin can make itching worse. This includes alcohol, caffeine, spicy food, hot baths and warm beds. These are common and pleasurable things: Itch can impact hugely on quality of life.

For some cancers, there are medicines that can help control itching.

Or if a drug is causing the itching, your doctor may change this to a different drug or reduce the dose.

Tips for dealing with itchy skin:

  • If your skin is dry, use a simple moisturiser such as aqueous cream twice a day. A combination of aqueous cream and menthol can be helpful (dermacool)
  • If you store the cream in the fridge, it will feel cool and soothing when applied
  • If hot water makes the itching worse, have cool or lukewarm baths or showers
  • Try adding an emollient (moisturising solution) such as Oilatum to bath water, and use aqueous cream instead of soap
  • A little baking soda added to plain bath water can also help
  • After bathing, apply emollients or aqueous cream while your skin is still damp
  • Keep your nails clean and short, and rub rather than scratch the itchy area
  • Avoid things that may irritate your skin, such as biological washing powders, scented soaps, bubble baths and products containing lanolin
  • Keep cool by wearing light, natural fibres such as cotton, and by keeping rooms cool
  • Avoid alcoholic drinks and hot, spicy foods
  • Use other activities to try to distract you from the itching
  • Counselling and relaxation techniques may help
  • Sometimes, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) can reduce itching. It can stimulate the nerves reaching the brain, and block out the sensation of itching. TENS treatments are offered at some NHS hospitals

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Published 1st November 2020

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Community Palliative Care Team - based at Meadow House Hospice
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Community Palliative Care Team - based at Meadow House Hospice

T. 020 8967 5179

W. http://meadowhouse.lnwh.nhs.uk/our-services/community-team/

The Community Specialist Palliative Care Nurse Team provides advice and visiting to palliative care patients in Ealing and Hounslow. The team are based at Meadow House Hospice.

The team will visit patients with progressive life limiting illness in their own homes. They provide specialist advice around pain and symptom control and support for patients, their families, and carers during the last stages of illness. They also support patients wishing to die at home through coordination with GPs and hospital teams.

The team is comprised of medical consultants, specialist nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, social workers, a bereavement support officer and a patient and carer advocacy worker

The team can be contacted for referrals Monday to Friday 9.00am to 5.00pm.

Between Monday to Friday 5.00pm and 8.30am, the Out of Hours Telephone Advice line 020 8102 5000 takes calls. Weekends and Bank Holidays 5.00pm to 9.00am.

Referral form for clinician use only.

Community Specialist Palliative Care Referral Form V4.1 (DOCX)

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