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Featured Breast Cancer Articles

How Second Hand Smoke Threatens Your Health
Secondhand smoking, breathing in of environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), is also called passive smoking. It is when a person breathes in smoke given off into the environment by other people. Secondhand smoke or ETS is a combination of side stream smoke ...

Life Insurance - Medical History Increases The Cost For 66% Of Applicants
Lucky applicants for life insurance can be insured within 48 hours and at the premium quoted - but 2 in 3 applicants are faced with delays plus the prospect of having their premium loaded. So who are the lucky ones? Basically, you'll have to be as fit ...

Why "Awareness Programs" Stink!
You have permission to publish this article electronically or in print as long as the bylines are included. Notification of print would be appreciated. I am writing this article at the risk of stepping on a lot of toes! Hopefully you do not have a ...





42 Years Of Smoking
 
It is amazing I am not dead.
Why and how I managed to quit smoking.
Fifty three years ago I had a friend who was a girl (not an official Girlfriend).
Her mom smoked and worked away from home all day, an opportunity her daughter utilized to pinch her smokes and share them with me. Both our parents smoked as well.
So off and on I became accustomed to smoking; my smoking habit got a real boost when I joined the merchant marine service at the age of seventeen, because sailors are allowed to purchase cigarettes tax-free outsideof territorial waters.
Eventually I began smoking more and even more cigarettes and had to get out of bed two or three times nightly for an additional nicotine fix.
Life without cigarettes was just not imaginable.
Going on an airline was sheer torture because I was not allowed to smoke for two or three of hours.
On a flight from Canada to Singapore I sneaked a few of smokes in the washroom in spite of the fact that airplanes were already putting people in jail for smoking on board.
As the years went by half of my mother's family died of lung cancer.
My father's only sibling died of lung cancer.
My mother died of a brain tumor - she used to be a heavy smoker.
My father developed lung cancer.
After he got lung cancer he visited me; he looked like a pathetic skin on bones human, wearing a corduroy suit, however even at this point he still stood outside SMOKING IN OUR GARAGE.
My brother's wife has breast cancer; my brother smokes cigars, and second-hand smoke is known to cause breast cancer.
I personally began having coughing spells in the nighttime and the vision in my left eye began to deteriorate.
Me quitting smoking? Impossible : I've no willpower.
Because I knew I couldn't possibly quit I never even bothered to acquire Nicorette or any other smoking-cessation product.
So after a whole lifetime of smoking I knew I was going to die of lung cancer too.
However WAIT: the story isn't finished yet.
On September fourth, 2002 I was browsing in a Calgary bookstore called Black and Noble and a book jumped out at me.
It was a 385 page book called "How to Stop Smoking" by a British accountant named Allan Carr.
I glanced at the 1st couple of pages where the author boasted that his book was the only way to quit smoking without any withdrawal symptoms or even without a nocotine patch.
I bought the book because I was curious to see how anyone could write 385 pages about how to quit smoking.
I finished the book in 9 days.
On September 13, 2002 at 3 pm I took my last drag from a cigarette and exhaled it through a Kleenex. That was my last cigarette. Since then I have never even thought about smoking again. People can smoke all around me and I'm not even slightly tempted.
This book really changed my mindset. The book "How to Stop Smoking" by Allan Carr is not available in American bookstores, but can be found in Canada and at internet bookstores such as Amazon. I no longer have my smoker's cough and the vision in my left eye is back to normal.
About the Author
Frank Hague quit smoking at the age of 58, however, his little brother still smokes although his wife has breast cancer. http://www.youwillquit.com

Breast Cancer News



University at Buffalo Reporter

Detailing the problems of 'breast cancer culture'
Washington Post
In the early '90s, a Simi Valley, Calif., woman named Charlotte Haley, appalled at the minuscule amount of money going to cancer research, created the first breast cancer ribbon. It was an orangey-pink — salmon-colored, really — and made of fabric.
Breast cancer philanthropy featured in women's film festivalUniversity at Buffalo Reporter
First Run Features to Release New Feature Documentary, Pink Ribbons, Inc.Movie City News

all 3 news articles »

Twin County Regional Hospital gets breast cancer awareness grant
WSLS
The Avon Breast Health Outreach Program has awarded a $33232 one-year grant to Twin County Regional Hospital to increase awareness of the life-saving benefits of early detection of breast cancer. It is the first year that the program has received ...

and more »

Los Angeles Times

Komen's Nancy Brinker: "I made some mistakes"
CBS News
Nancy Brinker, the founder and CEO of leading breast cancer charity Susan G. Komen for the Cure Foundation, said Wednesday she "made some mistakes" surrounding her organization's widely criticized decision to defund Planned Parenthood.
Komen's Next HeadacheWall Street Journal
Karen Heller: Defunding Planned Parenthood: Did you know it serves men, too?Philadelphia Inquirer
Could the Komen Charitable Catastrophe Have Been Avoided?Forbes
The Chattanoogan -HealthNews
all 1,114 news articles »

Most women with cancer want a role in decisions
Reuters
By Kerry Grens | NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - About two-thirds of women diagnosed with early stage breast cancer want to take part in making decisions about their treatment, according to a new survey of patients from five different countries.
Are Older Breast Cancer Patients Undertreated?CBS42
Breast cancer kills older women more oftenFox News
Older doesn't mean less likely to benefit from breast cancer treatmentsAmerican Council on Science and Health
MedPage Today
all 16 news articles »

Sky News

Surgery and chemotherapy are possible for pregnant women with breast cancer
Medical Xpress
Breast cancer in pregnant women is as common as in non-pregnant women of the same age, with no evidence to suggest pregnancy increases the risk of such cancer. In the majority of cases, pregnant women can have their breast cancer treated with surgery ...
Pregnancy cancer treatment 'hope'The Press Association
Safe To Treat Pregnant Cancer PatientsSky News
Cancer Treatment OK During PregnancyMedPage Today
Washington Post
all 93 news articles »