Cancer society’s Relay for Life looking for volunteers

Cancer society’s Relay for Life looking for volunteers
The American Cancer Society Relay For Life of Sarpy County is currently searching for volunteers interested in serving on the 2010 planning committee.

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How To Fight Breast Cancer And Win!: A Matter Of Life And Health

Product Description
This book is not just another book on breast cancer. It is written by a physician who has had the disease twice and candidly relays her experience with the disease. This book also has a thorough and understandable manual on breast cancer diagnosis, a personal health journal, a pictorial monograph of actual breast cancer cases, traditional and alternative treatments and life style changes that you can make to beat the disease…. More >>

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The Many Risk Factors of Prostate Cancer

Nobody wants to get cancer. That being said, we should all be aware of what the risk factors are for certain cancers. If you think you are at a higher risk for a specific type of cancer you should become familiar with what factors tend to increase the likelihood that you will develop the disease. Say, for instance, that prostate cancer runs in your family. You should know that there are many different factors that increase your risk, especially since there are some factors that you have control over.

There are several main factors that you do not have control over. One of those factors is your age. Men over the age of 50 have a higher chance of being diagnosed with this cancer. More than 70 percent of men with prostate cancer are over the age of 65. Race is another factor that you cannot control. Prostate cancer is 60 percent more common among African-American men than among Caucasian men. If you have a family history of this disease, you definitely have an increased risk of developing the disease yourself. A man’s risk of developing it is more than doubled if he has a father or brother that has the disease. Although, just because a relative has prostate cancer, it doesn’t mean that you necessarily will get it as well. Sometimes the cancer is simply sporadic, meaning that it can develop in one male relative, but not another. Only five to ten percent of those cases are determined to be hereditary. This would be a family with three or more affected relatives within the immediate family or a family where each of three generations are affected.

» Read more: The Many Risk Factors of Prostate Cancer

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