
Aromatherapy in Oncology Care
Aromatherapy in Oncology Centers: A Gentle Yet Powerful Support for Healing
Cancer care is about more than managing disease, it is about supporting the whole person through one of the most vulnerable experiences of life. In oncology centers across the country, integrative therapies are increasingly being recognized as essential companions to medical treatment. Among these, aromatherapy stands out as a simple, evidence-informed, and deeply human way to support comfort, calm, and connection for patients and staff alike.
Why Aromatherapy Belongs in Oncology Care

Patients receiving chemotherapy, radiation, or immunotherapy often experience symptoms such as anxiety, nausea, fatigue, pain, sleep disturbance, and emotional distress. While medications play an important role, they may not address the full spectrum of these experiences, and sometimes add their own side effects.
Aromatherapy, when used appropriately, offers a non-invasive, low-risk intervention that can be layered alongside conventional care. Through inhalation or carefully diluted topical application, essential oils can support the nervous system, ease symptom burden, and foster a sense of agency and comfort during treatment.
Clinical settings most commonly use aromatherapy to support:
Stress and anxiety reduction
Nausea and digestive discomfort
Pain and muscle tension
Sleep and fatigue management
Emotional well-being and mood support

What makes aromatherapy particularly valuable in oncology care is its adaptability, it can be offered in minutes, individualized to patient preference, and integrated seamlessly into nursing workflows.
Evidence-Informed, Not “Alternative”
The use of aromatherapy in oncology is not about replacing medical care, it is about enhancing it. Research continues to demonstrate that specific essential oils, such as lavender for anxiety and sleep, peppermint or ginger for nausea, and frankincense or copaiba for pain and inflammation, may offer meaningful symptom relief when used as adjunctive support.
Equally important is how aromatherapy is delivered. In clinical oncology settings, best practice emphasizes:
Inhalation via tissue, personal inhaler, or brief diffusion
Conservative topical application at low dilutions on intact skin
Informed consent and patient choice
Attention to contraindications, sensitivities, and shared spaces
Documentation of patient response
This approach honors both clinical rigor and patient dignity.
Supporting the Care Team, Too
Oncology nurses and staff carry a significant emotional and physical load. Repeated exposure to suffering, high-acuity demands, and time pressure contributes to burnout and compassion fatigue. Aromatherapy can also serve as a micro-practice for staff, offering moments of grounding, clarity, and renewal during demanding shifts.
When healthcare professionals experience the benefits themselves, they are better equipped to share these tools with patients—creating a culture of care that supports everyone in the healing environment.
A Bridge Between Science and Humanity
At its core, aromatherapy in oncology centers is about restoring balance—physically, emotionally, and energetically. A familiar scent can evoke calm, reduce fear, and remind patients that they are more than a diagnosis. For nurses and practitioners, it reconnects care with presence and intention.
As healthcare continues to evolve, integrative therapies like aromatherapy invite us to move beyond symptom management alone and toward whole-person healing. When thoughtfully implemented, aromatherapy becomes not just an intervention, but a reminder of the heart of healthcare—compassion, connection, and hope.
Click here to read more about this in my recent contribution to Energy Magazine.

