American Cancer Society

Google Tech Talk July 29, 2008 ABSTRACT Dr. Elmer E. Huerta is the Principal Investigator (PI) of the Latin American Cancer Research Coalition (LACRC) and a member of the LACRC Steering Committee. He is currently the President of the American Cancer Society and the Founder and Director of the Cancer Preventorium at the Washington Cancer Institute in the Washington Hospital Center, the only cancer prevention/screening service for Latinos in the Washington, DC, metropolitan area. The goal of the clinic is to encourage preventive screenings; therefore, the clinic is open to patients who do not have any disease symptoms. Born in Peru, Dr. Huerta obtained his medical degree at the University of San Marcos in 1981. Trained in Internal Medicine and Medical Oncology in Peru, he completed a fellowship in oncology research at the Johns Hopkins Oncology Center in 1988, a residence in internal medicine at St. Agnes Hospital in 1991, an MPH at the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health in 1992, and a fellowship in Cancer Prevention and Control at the National Cancer Institute in 1994. Through his educational work, Dr. Huerta has gained a high degree of respect and trust in the Hispanic community at the local, national, and international levels. Since 1989, Dr. Huerta’s daily radio show Cuidando su Salud (Taking Care of Your Health) has provided daily disease prevention and health promotion messages to Hispanics on a Washington, DC-area Spanish-language station. Dr. Huerta

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Video Rating: 5 / 5

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Sky Foundation, Inc. Raises Approximately $111000 in 2011 To Find a Test for

Sky Foundation, Inc. Raises Approximately 1000 in 2011 To Find a Test for
The antibodies will be used as diagnostic markers that aid in the early detection of pancreatic cancer. Sky Foundation raised the money in a variety of ways: at its annual brunch in November, and through individual gifts, memorial donations, …
Read more on MarketWatch (press release)

Shrewsbury girl forgoes birthday gifts for cancer cause
One of her grandmothers is in an ongoing struggle with brain cancer and the other is a breast cancer survivor. Her aunt is a breast cancer survivor and has been a spokeswoman for her local cancer treatment center and a tireless fundraiser. …
Read more on Worcester Telegram

Cancer survivor assumes Santa role for pediatric patients
In 2009, he was being treated there for prostate cancer, according to a press release. Wanting to do something special for children being treated at the center during Christmastime, he dressed as Santa Claus and handed out presents. The gifts he hands …
Read more on Ultimate West U

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Christiana Care promotes breast health to Latinas through promotoras

Check out these Stage Two Breast Cancer images:

Christiana Care promotes breast health to Latinas through promotoras
Stage Two Breast Cancer

Image by Christiana Care
Through Christiana Care, Latinas are learning about breast health and cancer screenings, essential information they can share with others as “promotoras”—promoters of health education—to Delaware’s rapidly growing Hispanic community.

“If you teach someone, then ask her to go talk to her family, her community, you raise awareness that cancer is not a death sentence,” says Nora Katurakes, RN, MSN, OCN, Christiana Care’s manager οf Community Health Outreach and Education.

Josefina Hernandez, 51, knows firsthand how important it is to get an annual mammogram. Her regularly scheduled screening detected Stage 1 breast cancer, an early form of the disease that is highly treatable.

“I would have never found out that I had cancer if I hadn’t had my mammogram,” she says. “Now, I tell my kids, my sisters, my family, so that they will know.”

At a recent workshops at the Helen F. Graham Cancer Center and Woodlawn Library, Hernandez and other promotoras-in-training learned facts about breast health and the effectiveness of early detection and treatment in saving lives.

“Culturally, Latinas don’t see a need to go the doctor’s unless we are sick,” says Sharon Gomez, outreach coordinator. “Through the promotoras, we are emphasizing screenings that can detect a problem before someone feels sick.”

Among Hispanic women, breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer death, according to the American Cancer Society (ACS). Hispanic women are 20 percent more likely to die from breast cancer than non-Hispanic white women diagnosed at the same age, often because the cancer is diagnosed at a later stage, according to ACS Cancer Facts. Within the past year, 41.7 percent of Hispanic women had a mammogram, compared to 53 percent of non-Hispanic white women.

Throughout the year, Christiana Care’s outreach staff works with Hispanics and people in other underserved communities to make health care more accessible.

“We frequently get calls from people who do not have insurance and others who do not have primary-care physicians, asking if they can get help,” says Joceline Valentin, a bilingual outreach coordinator at the Community Outreach and Education program at the Helen F. Graham Cancer Center. “We tell them ‘yes,’ and that we will meet them at appointments to interpret.”

The Community Health Outreach and Education Department obtained a grant for a lay health educator program from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act through the NCI National Community Cancer Centers Program. The two-year grant pays for a full-time bilingual community outreach worker. Susan G. Komen for the Cure Philadelphia affiliate also pays for a bilingual outreach coordinator.

In addition to the promotoras, the program includes training medical assistants at federally qualified clinics to promote screenings, starting with breast health and eventually including tests for cervical and colon cancer.

“Our goal is to have 300 people receive screenings as a result of this program,” Katurakes says. “Each one of the promotoras represents a connection in a family network who can reach others we might not otherwise have an opportunity to help.”

Christiana Care promotes breast health to Latinas through promotoras
Stage Two Breast Cancer

Image by Christiana Care
Through Christiana Care, Latinas are learning about breast health and cancer screenings, essential information they can share with others as “promotoras”—promoters of health education—to Delaware’s rapidly growing Hispanic community.

“If you teach someone, then ask her to go talk to her family, her community, you raise awareness that cancer is not a death sentence,” says Nora Katurakes, RN, MSN, OCN, Christiana Care’s manager οf Community Health Outreach and Education.

Josefina Hernandez, 51, knows firsthand how important it is to get an annual mammogram. Her regularly scheduled screening detected Stage 1 breast cancer, an early form of the disease that is highly treatable.

“I would have never found out that I had cancer if I hadn’t had my mammogram,” she says. “Now, I tell my kids, my sisters, my family, so that they will know.”

At a recent workshops at the Helen F. Graham Cancer Center and Woodlawn Library, Hernandez and other promotoras-in-training learned facts about breast health and the effectiveness of early detection and treatment in saving lives.

“Culturally, Latinas don’t see a need to go the doctor’s unless we are sick,” says Sharon Gomez, outreach coordinator. “Through the promotoras, we are emphasizing screenings that can detect a problem before someone feels sick.”

Among Hispanic women, breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer death, according to the American Cancer Society (ACS). Hispanic women are 20 percent more likely to die from breast cancer than non-Hispanic white women diagnosed at the same age, often because the cancer is diagnosed at a later stage, according to ACS Cancer Facts. Within the past year, 41.7 percent of Hispanic women had a mammogram, compared to 53 percent of non-Hispanic white women.

Throughout the year, Christiana Care’s outreach staff works with Hispanics and people in other underserved communities to make health care more accessible.

“We frequently get calls from people who do not have insurance and others who do not have primary-care physicians, asking if they can get help,” says Joceline Valentin, a bilingual outreach coordinator at the Community Outreach and Education program at the Helen F. Graham Cancer Center. “We tell them ‘yes,’ and that we will meet them at appointments to interpret.”

The Community Health Outreach and Education Department obtained a grant for a lay health educator program from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act through the NCI National Community Cancer Centers Program. The two-year grant pays for a full-time bilingual community outreach worker. Susan G. Komen for the Cure Philadelphia affiliate also pays for a bilingual outreach coordinator.

In addition to the promotoras, the program includes training medical assistants at federally qualified clinics to promote screenings, starting with breast health and eventually including tests for cervical and colon cancer.

“Our goal is to have 300 people receive screenings as a result of this program,” Katurakes says. “Each one of the promotoras represents a connection in a family network who can reach others we might not otherwise have an opportunity to help.”

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Kylie Minogue – Her Battle Against Breast Cancer (HD)

PLEASE WATCH IN HD !!! A tribute to kylie’s strength and courage. She is an inspiration and a true white diamond. *No copyright infringement intended*
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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Once-promising area of cancer research crumbles further

Once-promising area of cancer research crumbles further
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – In a reminder of how much a once-heralded area of cancer research has crumbled, a former Duke University oncologist and his colleagues have issued their eighth study retraction. Dr. Anil Potti and his co-authors on Friday …
Read more on GMA News

Tesco aims to raise £10m for Cancer Research UK
Tesco is aiming to raise more than £10m for Cancer Research UK by making it the retailer's Charity of the Year in 2012. The money – to be raised by Tesco, its staff, customers and suppliers – will be spent on new research and an awareness campaign to …
Read more on Talking Retail

Research links protein complex with pancreatic cancer
The study, which was published on Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, used samples of 70 different pancreatic cancers, which were provided by the Sol Goldman Pancreatic Cancer Research Center at the Johns Hopkins University …
Read more on The Stanford Daily

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Invasive Breast Cancer with Lung Metastases

Jacinta McShane, 56. Invasive Breast Cancer with lung metastases in the right upper and lower lobe and left lower lobe responds very well to the Issels Treatment. In February 2009 Jacinta reports to be in excellent condition and high spirits. TheIssels Treatment is a comprehensive immunotherapy program that integrates the most effective state-of-the-art technologies, such as advanced cancer vaccines, and other safe and scientifically validated therapies. For more information on the Issels Treatment, please visit www.issels.com or call 1.888.447.7357.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

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Winner of Second Annual Bloganthropy Awards Announced

Asheville, NC (PRWEB) June 24, 2011

Susan Niebur, of the blog Toddler Planet, today was named the winner of the 2011 Bloganthropy Awards. The Bloganthropy Awards is a unique program that recognizes women bloggers who have made a difference by using social media effectively to support a good cause.

An astrophysicist who has worked for NASA and mother of two young boys, Niebur has battled inflammatory breast cancer four times, surviving countless surgeries, intense radiation and chemotherapy. Through her blog, Susan has spread awareness about the disease, the cancer that kills without the lump, and has lead thousands of women to join the Army of Women, a movement founded by the Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation and the Avon Foundation for Women that provides women afflicted with breast cancer access to potential research studies and participation in treatment trials. Susan sits on the board of the American Cancer Society, is active in its More Birthdays campaign, and has been featured by media across the country.

Niebur received an honorary plaque and a $ 2,000 cash prize for her cause-focused social media accomplishments.

The Bloganthropy Awards ceremony was held in Asheville, NC in conjunction with the popular Type-A Parent Conference, and was presented by Bloganthropy.org, a non-profit organization that combines the power of social media with the resources of corporate giving, and Childs Play Communications, specialists in connecting companies with moms. GIVE Education, one of Procter & Gambles social sustainability programs partnering with Communities In Schools to help keep more than one million kids in school, is the 2011 award sponsor. In 2010, Procter & Gamble sponsored the first annual Bloganthropy Awards through its GIVE Health initiative. The Bloganthropy Awards presentation ceremony sponsors include: MAM USA, Toy State, Backyard Safari Outfitters, Music Together, Fairy Tales Hair Care and Corolle.

We are delighted to honor Susan Niebur and her blog, Toddler Planet, says Stephanie Azzarone, president, Childs Play Communications. Susan has shown great dedication to informing and advocating for cancer patients and survivors over the years and it is our pleasure to recognize and help support those efforts.

Candace Lindemann, co-founder of Bloganthropy, adds: The Bloganthropy Awards enable us to applaud the work of these powerful women and to inspire others to make a difference using social media.

In addition to Niebur, the following finalists were recognized for their unique contributions to the blogosphere. They are:

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Pink Ribbon Program Coming To Stuart, FL – February 10 & 11, 2012

Stuart, FL (PRWEB) December 31, 2011

The Pink Ribbon Program is an exercise program designed specifically for post-operative breast cancer survivors. Program founder and director of the Pink Ribbon Program, Doreen Puglisi M.S., became aware of the need as she herself was diagnosed with breast cancer. She used the Pink Ribbon Program to regain the range of motion as well as strength in her affected arm.

Range of Motion Pilates & More will be hosting a two day workshop on Friday, February 10 and Saturday, February 11, 2012 for individuals who work with breast cancer survivors through Pilates, physical therapy, occupational therapy, personal training, nursing, and manual lymphatic drainage therapy. The goal of this interactive two day course is to provide the participants with a knowledge base that is essential to the successful evaluation of the breast cancer survivor, from diagnosis to treatment, recovery, prevention of lymphedema and proper exercise guidelines and protocols. Evidence based practice and integration of material from the areas of functional exercise, shoulder rehabilitation and Pilates exercise will be the emphasis of the course sessions.

This course is open to Physical Therapists, Occupational Therapists, Pilates Instructors, Nurses, Personal Trainers and MLD Therapists.

The Pink Ribbon Program is offered on Friday, February 10 starting at 2:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. and Saturday, February 11 starting at 8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Workshop cost is $ 425 per person plus $ 35 for course materials. Space is still available for this two day workshop. Please visit http://www.pinkribbonprogram.com or call 888-445-3089.

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Related Lymphatic Cancer Press Releases

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Q&A: What happens when metastatic bone cancer produces persistent cough?

Question by Junior Sample: What happens when metastatic bone cancer produces persistent cough?

Best answer:

Answer by surfinthedesert
It probably spread to the lungs from the ribcage. The end isn’t too far off when it spreads to the lungs or the brain :(

What do you think? Answer below!

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12 Signs of Breast Cancer, revealed!

Check out these Breast Cancer Signs images:

12 Signs of Breast Cancer, revealed!
Breast Cancer Signs

Image by The Mayor of Worldwide Breast Cancer
As part of my phd research into breast cancer awareness, I’m testing this image to see if each sign is communicating right. If you’ve got 2 minutes, can you take my survey and help me out? Thanks!

lemonland.signsquiz.sgizmo.com

20060401 – Carol’s Breast Cancer Benefit – Angel Susan Clint Carolyn (by Angel) – 142098290
Breast Cancer Signs

Image by Rev. Xanatos Satanicos Bombasticos (ClintJCL)
Angel sticks out her tongue and flashes us the shocker, Susan and Carolyn look into each other’s eyes, Clint’s actually smiling for the camera. Later, a co-worker of his was randomly at this party and talked to Clint, who was way too wasted to be dealing with that at the moment.

Angel, Carolyn, Clint, Susan.
shocker sign, sticking out tongue.
cigarette.

Carol Bui’s house, Arlington, Virgina.
April 1, 2006.
Pic by Angel.

… Read my blog at http://ClintJCL.wordpress.com.
… Read Carolyn’s blog at http://CarolynCASL.wordpress.com.

… Read Angel’s blog at http://ansaphone4.livejournal.com/.
… View Angel’s photos at http://www.flickr.com/photos/ansaphone4/.
… Read Susan’s blog at Id-Is-Stupid.livejournal.com/.
… View Susan’s photos at http://www.flickr.com/photos/s_eth/.

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