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Informative Articles

Candle Company Supports Breast Cancer Research
For Immediate Release Contact: Shannon Young; Office: 801-377-2494, Cell: 801-362-5362 shannon.young@foreverybody.com October 5, 2005 Lindon, Utah- For the fourth consecutive year, a Utah-based candle company has focused its efforts on...

Hormone Replacement Therapy: Breast Cancer Risk In Perspective
Many women have concluded that recent study results show that hormone replacement therapy increases breast cancer risk. A closer look at this study shows that the increase in risk was far less than half a per cent a year and may not be due to...

Can You Reduce Your Risk of Breast Cancer
We hear it all the time.lose weight for your health. Few people however, realize the extent to which this is critical to their physical well-being and ultimately their life expectancy. In January 2003, the Journal of the American Medical...

African American Women Need Earlier Screening for Breast Cancer
Breast cancer is the second leading cause of death for women, ages 40-55, and African American women under the age of 45 are more likely to develop breast cancer than any other group of women in the US. Every three minutes a woman is diagnosed...

The Remarkable Antioxidant Power Of Cranberries -- And Three No-cost Cranberry Recipes
With the holiday season just around the corner, cranberries will start to make their yearly appearance in Thanksgiving and other seasonal meals. Their tangy flavor and bright red color make them a favorite this time of year (it's also when they're...

 
Walk to beat breast cancer

WOMEN with breast cancer who walk at least an hour a week have a better chance of beating the disease than those who don't exercise at all, researchers said. "It is well established that exercise plays an important role in preventing many diseases, including breast cancer," said lead researcher Michelle Holmes of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.

"However, we found that women who are physically active after breast cancer diagnosis may lower their risk of death from breast cancer and cancer recurrence." Even walking an hour a week lifted survival rates but exercising more than five hours a week did not confer any added survival benefit. The study noted discouraging estimates that women with breast cancer tend to decrease their levels of physical activity by two hours a week and those whoa re obese reduce activity even more.


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