Taking a daily multivitamin may raise a woman's risk of breast cancer, a new study suggests. A study of 35,000 Swedish women found that those who took a multivitamin were 19 percent more likely to develop cancer later in life. Researchers say the results are concerning, and that further research is needed to determine the connection between vitamins and cancer.
A shrewdly designed study adds support to the idea that vitamin D may play a role in breast and colon cancer risk reduction. The study... Read more »
Two news bulletins that hit the health news scene: (1) Chemotherapy may be a new and viable treatment option for Testicular Seminoma -... Read more »
Taking more than one multivitamin a day may increase a man's prostate cancer risk by a third, a new study suggests. The U.S. National Cancer... Read more »
A study has raised new questions about the effects multivitamins have on breast cancer risk. Puerto Rican researchers found that multivitamin and... Read more »
People who get a high amount of vitamin K in their diet are less likely to develop or die from some cancers, researchers say. The study found that... Read more »
Physicians have known for years that women who have more to term pregnancies appear to be somewhat protected against developing breast cancer. Women... Read more »
A new study published in the British Medical Journal has found that people who have the highest levels of vitamin D in their blood appear to have as... Read more »