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A breast cancer cure or curse?, It is worth exploring simulating pregnancy to avert breast cancer, says ALLAN LANGLANDS, but don’t trade one risk for another, urges LYN SWINBURNE.THERE can surely be no greater geographical contrast than that between Australia and Iceland, yet both rank among the countries with the highest incidence of breast cancer. We also know that when women from low-incidence countries such as our Pacific neighbours (except New Zealand) migrate to Australia, they and their children The war on cancer, Twenty-five years after the war was declared, new insights are plentiful, but the death toll has mounted Imagine declaring war when you know little about your enemy’s firepower, strategies or tactics. That’s what happened on Jan. 22, 1971, when President Richard Nixon proclaimed war on cancer in his State of the Union address. Many anticipated swift victory, with the taming of the dread disease likened to a moon landing. Even as recently as 1984, the National Cancer Institute’s director predicted that cancer deaths could be halved by the year 2020 \\ Event raises cancer awareness, funds When Paula Naylor was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1984, she never imagined that seven years later she would feel well enough to participate in a 5-kilometer run through LaFortune Park.”There was a period of time when it was just such a shock to think I had cancer. It was so scary,” Naylor, 45, said, recalling the day when she discovered a lump in her breast while showering.”But women can recover from breast cancer – recover to walk and run. “We Beat Breast Cancer” If there’s one message you can take away from this story, know that breast cancer is not a death sentence. This truth may come as a relief in an age when Black women, although less likely to get breast cancer than their White counterparts, are more likely to die from it when they do. “Finding breast cancer early — before it has spread from the breast — means a 97 percent five-year survival rate, The Lung cancer poses deadliest threat by far, Cross-sectional scan showing top-to-bottom views of the lungs revealed Sherry Walker’s tiny tumour In the time it takes to read the next few paragraphs, someone will die of lung cancer somewhere in the world.The Global Lung Cancer Coalition says lung cancer consumes one human being every 30 seconds – more than breast and prostate cancer combined, with another 1.2 million new cases diagnosed every year.If everything goes well, Milton resident Sherry Walker, 57, won’t be among the casualties. |
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