The number of women who survive breast cancer for at least 10 years has almost doubled since the 1970's, a new analysis has found, and many other cancers show that level of improvement as well. Less than 40 percent of women with breast cancer diagnosed in the early 1970s lived for ten years, while that number is now 77 percent. The survival rate for ovarian cancer has also doubled, as bowel cancer and lymphoma.
About 6 out of every 10 women diagnosed with breast cancer will survive the disease. But this is just the tip of the statistical iceberg.... Read more »
What does it mean to have breast cancer? Is it a serious condition that you operate on and cure, like appendicitis? Do you treat it with... Read more »
What if… you’re not the person you always imagined yourself to be?As we grow from child to adult and the years pass, we develop certain... Read more »
As yours truly was pulling all-nighters at the ol' drawing board, The Hubster (aka Silvano) was working 15-hour days at the restaurant.... Read more »
I am pondering the announcement of a study to be discussed next weekend on Vitamin D and breast cancer. I'm starting to look through the... Read more »
Older women with breast cancer who undergo chemotherapy in addition to surgery and radiation may live longer than women who don't undergo chemo,... Read more »
Postmenopausal breast cancer patients who switch from tamoxifen therapy to aromatase inhibitors boost their chances for survival from the disease.... Read more »
Researchers say weight loss isn't the only reason healthy eating should be on your New Year's resolution list: it may also decrease your risk of... Read more »
(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Psychological intervention programs may not only improve a breast cancer patients' overall health, they may also increase their... Read more »
Taking hormone replacement therapy seems to increase long-term survival rates for breast cancer patients, according to a new study. Researchers say... Read more »