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Breast Cancer and the Sunshine Vitamin
12 hours ago ago from The Weight Loss Club
Women getting breast cancer wasn't very common news about seventy years ago. Now, there's at least one woman in eight who develop the deadly disease. Although there's no definitive study that isolates the causes of breast cancer, there is growing belief in the medical communities that the illness is linked primarily to genetics and diet. Western diets, in particular, are said to easily predispose anyone to developing the disease due to high ...
Related contentHow Many Of U Women Support Breast Cancer Awareness?
2 hours ago ago from Health awareHealth aware
I do as much as possible b/c I once had a lump in my breast, thank God it wasn't malignant, but it forced me to permantly stop smoking. It was just an infection that had to b drained.
Related contentMemory of loving wife, mother honored by holiday tree
3 hours ago ago from Shrewsbury Massachusetts Lantern
SHREWSBURY For years Wendi Baron-Willette decorated the blue spruce in front of her families’ 30 Westmont Drive home with an array of Disney ornaments and lights, wishing local commuters and neighbors a happy holiday season. This year the tree will not be wearing its traditional display, but rather hundreds of pink lights and bows to celebrate Wendi’s life and her recent courageous battle with breast cancer. Wendi, who lived in ...
Related contentPink Ribbon Breast Cancer Awareness Light Up Rubber Ducky
13 hours ago ago from Pool Toys
Pink Ribbon Breast Cancer Awareness Light Up Rubber Ducky Review Pink Ribbon Breast Cancer Awareness Light Up Rubber Ducky Feature Duck has sensors on the bottom & blinks when touched or while floating in water. Floats upright. Measures 2-1/2"H x 3"W x 3"L. Pink Ribbon Breast Cancer Awareness Light Up Rubber Ducky Overview This adorable transluscent rubber duck is great for collectors, breast cancer survivors, or just a fun toy for ...
Related contentGolf Mickelson Steps out of PGA Tour as Wife is Diagnosed with Cancer | Cancer 101
8 hours ago ago from Cancer 101
By Audrey Nolan The World No. 2 golf player Phil Mickelson announced on Wednesday that he is stepping out from the PGA tour schedule indefinitely since his wife, Amy Mickelson, was diagnosed with breast cancer. According to his management office, his wife will have to be submitted to some more tests but she will start the treatment as soon as possible, and she will be submitted to surgery as well, while Phil will stay beside her to help her ...
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Promising new developments on the breast cancer front
17 hours ago ago from DailyFinance
The San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium , held Dec. 9-13, brought mostly good news for breast cancer patients and drugmakers. And that's a welcome development: Aside from non-melanoma skin cancer, breast cancer is the most common form of cancer in women and the second-leading cause of cancer death in women. Estimates for 2009 put the number of new cases at over 192,000 women and nearly 2,000 men, with over 40,000 deaths in women and 440 in ...
Related contentJane Hamsher: Calling On Ellen DeGeneres, Christie Brinkley And Other Stars: No More "Race For the Cure" Cancer Money to Hadassah Lieberman
22 hours ago ago from Huffington Post
On Friday, I wrote a letter to the Susan G. Komen Foundation asking that they stop using money that was raised for cancer research to pay Hadassah Lieberman , wife of Senator Joe Lieberman, as a spokesperson for the organization. The organization issued a statement saying that they refuse to do so . As a three time breast cancer survivor, I do not believe that those who "race for the cure" and donate their hard earned dollars think they're ...
Related contentCheckup: Medical journal faults reporting on health issues
10 hours ago ago from Washington Post - Health
Adapted from The Post's daily health blog. Rx: Take health news with a grain of salt It would be nice to think that you could trust journalists to deliver the straight scoop when it comes to covering health news. But sometimes we don't. Journalists' getting health stories wrong is the subject of an editorial published online Nov. 20 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. It notes two examples of major health stories gone awry. ...
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