Yoga professionals, healthcare providers, and institutional partners frequently ask us what an Oncology Yoga certificate program covers — and how it compares to other yoga training, whether that’s a standard 200-hour program, an advanced yoga therapy qualification, or a continuing education course.
The short answer is that Oncology Yoga is a clinical specialization, not an extension of general yoga training. The list below outlines the key topics, competencies, and learning outcomes achieved in the yoga4cancer 75-Hour Certificate Program. It is designed to be used as a benchmark — against any yoga program, at any level.
Clinical Knowledge
- Deep understanding of cancer biology — what it is, how it spreads, and why it differs across 100+ types
- Comprehensive coverage of cancer treatments: surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, hormone therapy, and immunotherapy
- Cancer staging and grading — what staging systems mean, how to interpret a student’s diagnosis, and why that information shapes every teaching decision
- Cancer screening and diagnostic tools — understanding what survivors go through before they ever arrive in your class
- Detailed knowledge of treatment side effects — fatigue, neuropathy, lymphedema, bone loss, range of motion loss, muscle strength loss, weight changes, menopausal symptoms, cardiovascular impact, cognitive changes, anxiety, depression, and more — and exactly how each affects a yoga practice
- Breast reconstruction — in-depth coverage of the major reconstruction types, donor site limitations, protective posturing, and loss of sensation — and what each means for safe yoga practice
- How cancer intersects with pre-existing conditions — heart disease, diabetes, obesity, and other health challenges don’t disappear with a cancer diagnosis, and this training shows you how to navigate that complexity
- Understanding of advanced-stage and metastatic cancer and how to teach safely at every stage of the care continuum
- Knowledge of the immune system’s role in survivorship and how yoga supports it
Safety Skills You Don’t Get Elsewhere
- Training in which yoga poses are contraindicated for cancer populations — and the clinical reasoning behind each
- Specific protocols for students with lymphedema, bone metastases, neuropathy, post-surgical restrictions, implanted devices, cardiovascular complications, and active treatment
- Knowledge of poses that require special awareness or modification — and those that should be avoided entirely — across all major cancer types and treatment histories
- Surgical drain awareness — knowing the right questions to ask, why certain post-surgical situations are contraindications for practice, and how to handle this sensitively
- Chemotherapy-specific cautions — how reduced blood cell counts, infection risk, heat regulation disruption, and premature menopause each change what is safe in class
- Radiation-specific cautions — fibrosis, skin sensitivity, and the fatigue patterns unique to radiation that differ from chemotherapy fatigue
- Understanding of how environmental factors — room temperature, shared surfaces, certain breath techniques — pose specific risks to immunocompromised students
- Awareness of language and cueing that can be triggering for cancer survivors — and how to create a psychologically safe environment instead
- Recognition of the signs that a student needs modification in real time — even when they don’t ask for it
- A proprietary verbal intake process — a structured, conversational approach to gathering critical student information quickly and sensitively before every class
- Understanding of when to teach, when to modify, and when to refer a student back to their medical team
- Clear scope of practice guidelines so you always know where your professional boundaries are — and how to communicate them with confidence
The Physics of Yoga — Why It Actually Works
A 200-hour program teaches you poses. y4c teaches you the science behind why each pose does what it does to the body — and why that matters for someone in cancer recovery.
- Gravity — how body position directly affects lymphatic drainage, venous return, and bone strength — and why that changes everything about how you sequence a class
- Movement — why even small amounts of deliberate movement create measurable physiological change for cancer survivors
- Compression and Restriction — how certain poses stimulate circulation, lymph flow, and elimination — and how to apply them safely
- Resistance — how two-directional effort builds both strength and space in the body, and why that distinction matters for this population
- The Relaxation Response — the physiology of why yoga counteracts the chronic stress state that cancer diagnosis creates — and how to reliably trigger it
- The breath as a mechanical force — how breathing physically drives lymphatic flow, stimulates the vagus nerve, and shifts the nervous system — and how to teach it intentionally
- How all five principles operate in every pose — so you can make sequencing decisions based on science, not habit
Meeting the Standard of Care for Cancer Survivors
- Knowledge of the evidence-based physical activity guidelines for cancer survivors: 150 minutes of moderate exercise per week, plus strength training — and why “gentle yoga only” doesn’t meet that bar
- Training to deliver an active, breath-led practice that is both safe and sufficient to help survivors meet exercise oncology recommendations
- Understanding of why most cancer survivors are not meeting movement guidelines — and how Oncology Yoga can close that gap
- Skills to advocate for your students’ need for regular, structured, appropriate movement as part of their long-term survivorship plan
Delivering an Effective Intervention
- A proprietary class structure with seven essential elements — so every session you deliver is safe, complete, and evidence-informed
- A proprietary five-pillar methodology developed specifically for cancer populations — not adapted from general yoga
- Ability to design classes that address specific side effects: fatigue, sleep disruption, anxiety, depression, bone loss, lymphedema, range of motion, neuropathy, and pain
- Training in progressive sequencing — how to appropriately increase challenge as a student’s capacity improves over time
- Understanding of how to adapt a planned session in real time when a student’s status changes from one week to the next
- Skills to deliver a class that is therapeutically meaningful, not just comfortable — one that produces measurable benefit
- How to use props, supported seating, and adaptive tools as therapeutic instruments — not accommodations of last resort
- How to use metaphor intentionally as a pedagogical tool that bridges cancer experience and yoga practice
Evidence and Research Literacy
- Ability to read and evaluate yoga and oncology research — not just cite it
- Familiarity with the key clinical guidelines (SIO-ASCO, ACSM, ACS, AICR) that govern integrative oncology
- Language and framing to communicate your work credibly to healthcare providers and institutions
The Emotional and Professional Skills Nobody Else Teaches
- How to handle the death of a student — including how to process your own grief while continuing to hold space for the rest of the room
- How to recognize and manage compassion fatigue — and why self-care is an ethical professional responsibility in this field, not a personal luxury
- How to navigate personal cancer experience in the teaching space — when lived experience builds connection and when it crosses a line
- How to hold space for fear, grief, recurrence anxiety, and end-of-life realities — without losing your own grounding
- How to keep showing up, class after class, for people navigating one of the hardest experiences of their lives
Building a Sustainable Professional Practice
- How to write a program proposal and pitch your services to hospitals, cancer centers, community organizations, and yoga studios
- Understanding the funding landscape for Oncology Yoga — hospital wellness budgets, donor funding, grants, and participant fees — and why direct payment alone is rarely enough
- A marketing toolkit and practical guidance for launching your Oncology Yoga practice in your community
- How to position yourself credibly within interdisciplinary care teams — alongside oncologists, nurses, physical therapists, and social workers
- Your role as an advocate for Oncology Yoga in your community — and why that advocacy matters for survivors who can’t find qualified support
Professional Credibility and Community
- Individual mentor feedback on your teaching practicum from a senior y4c certified teacher
- Listing in the world’s largest directory of oncology yoga professionals
- 75 Yoga Alliance CEUs upon completion
- Access to the y4c teacher community across 39+ countries
- Ongoing access to a curated evidence library, updated as research evolves
The Confidence to Actually Do This Work
- You leave knowing not just what to teach, but why — and how to explain it to a skeptical oncologist, a nervous student, or a hospital program director
- 87% of y4c certified teachers are actively applying their certification after graduation

