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Posts with tag educate
Posted Apr 15th 2007 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Events, Thought for the Day
We cannot be silent is one slogan printed on specialty clothing offered by a company called Privacy. Other slogans include
United We Cure and
Mission. Purpose. Cure. The slogans say a lot -- but the accomplishments of Carolyn Jones, Founder and President/CEO of Privacy, say a whole lot more.
Think about this:
Jones lost her mother to breast cancer on November 16, 2000 during a time when too many questions about the disease were left unanswered and not enough options were available for women fighting for their lives.
Times have changed, in part due to outspoken pioneers like Jones, who are spreading the word and funding the cause.
Part of the Privacy corporate goal is to support medical research and to educate women about early detection and treatment.
"It is very clear that more information and research is needed due to the yearly increase in new cases nationally," says Jones who cites statistics such as this: every 12 minutes a woman in America will die from complications associated with breast cancer. And this: more than 1,500 new cases of male breast cancer will be diagnosed this year.Privacy, a California-based company with a social conscious, offers for both women and men an assortment of t-shirts, sweatshirts, jeans, hats, recommended books, accessories, breast cancer facts, and even a contest or two. A portion of all profits are donated to breast cancer initiatives with an emphasis on low-income and uninsured populations.
Check it all out right here.Posted Sep 29th 2006 10:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Lung Cancer, Services
The Lung Cancer Alliance -- the only national non-profit organization dedicated entirely to lung cancer patient support and advocacy -- asked pulmonary clinical nurse specialist Donna Wilson to help educate the lung cancer community about healthy breathing. Wilson agreed and her breathing tips, available on
podcast, are intended to relieve shortness of breath related to pain or activity. Her three breathing techniques -- detailed here -- are simple, easy-to-understand, and truly relaxing.
Before beginning this series of breathing exercises, stop whatever you are doing and sit down or lean against a wall.
- Place chin to your chest to relax your neck muscles. Breathe 10 short bursts of air in and out of your lips. As you expel air, neck and chest muscles should relax.
- Place chin to your chest. Breathe three times in through your nose and out through your mouth.
- Place chin to your chest. Close your mouth, and breathe four times in and out only through your nose.
After completing these exercises, lift your head, breathe normally, and let your shoulders relax. In a few minutes, your entire body should start to relax -- and shortness of breath will resolve.
I don't have lung cancer -- but I do have moments of anxiety and panic. So I plan to save these tips. And I plan to use them. And I plan to share them. Because we all can benefit from a dose of relaxation.
Posted Aug 20th 2006 8:00PM by Kristina Collins
Filed under: Colon and Rectal Cancer, Prevention, Young Adult Cancers, Services
The Colon Club is a non profit organization dedicated to educate young adults about colorectal cancer. This organization was founded in 2003 and is unique because it uses fun and zany ways to educate about screening and risk factors.
Take a walk through the Colossal Colon, a forty foot long, and four foot tall crawl through replica of a human colon. Buy the Colondar, a calendar of eighteen young survivors living with colorectal cancer.
Molly McMaster is a colorectal cancer survivor that was diagnosed on her twenty third birthday. Molly and Hannah Vogler, whose cousin and Molly's friend, died of the disease at age 27, are the founders of The Colon Club. Their goal us to educate as many people as possible, as early as possible.
The Colossal Colon is available for educational events.
Posted Jul 31st 2006 8:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Prevention, All Cancers, Daily news
Dealing with cancer in private is hard. Dealing with cancer publicly can be even harder. CEO Donna McAleer -- the founding executive and public face of the large, growing health care company Elant -- knows this firsthand. She just recently went public with her breast cancer diagnosis and prognosis after rumors of her demise started circulating. McAleer set the record straight, announcing that she is doing just fine. While her experience has been frightening, she is surviving well -- and she wants the public to know. She has run Elant for 20 years and wants to dispel any myths about its stability. Apple CEO Steve Jobs faced the same public drama in 2004 after surgery for pancreatic cancer and subsequent drops in Apple stock. Jobs recovered -- and so did the stock -- but the speculation that swirled was powerful and potentially damaging. Just as it was that same year when Kraft Foods was criticized for withholding details of its CEO's hospitalization.
There is some debate in the business world about all of this -- about whether or not executive illnesses should be disclosed. For public companies, one opinion is that there is an obligation to respond quickly to the public. In a private company, it's up to the CEO. McAleer's Elant is not a publicly traded company and there is no worry about stock price -- but her decision to reveal her personal health crisis was the right thing to do, she says. "I have an obligation to share this news in how I progress, in order to educate and make sure people aren't frightened by it," she said in reference to the memo she sent to her 700 employees and community groups too.
I'm open and honest about my own cancer experience because I believe it can help others -- and it helps me to talk about it too. So I'm a fan of a forthcoming approach in the workplace. I appreciate that some fear repercussions that might result from such a disclosure. But honesty may be the best policy -- for prevention of rumors and addressing worry and raising awareness too. McAleer seems to agree as she takes this opportunity to speak up, to encourage women to seek mammograms and to follow up on them.
Posted Jun 26th 2006 9:50PM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Skin Cancer, Environment

I confess. I was once a sun worshiper. I grew up in Ohio where a really sunny day was rare -- so on the occasion when the sun was bright and hot, I was in my back yard or at a swimming pool or at a lake soaking up the warmth and comfort of the rays that mostly burned my skin but gave me a glow that eventually turned the slightest shade of tan and made me feel healthy. It's ironic really -- that I felt healthy when the act of sunbathing is so completely damaging. And I knew this at the time and for the many years that followed -- and I still basked in the sun and vacationed in Florida and sometimes actually drove in the direction of the sun on a overcast day, in search of a tan that was never fully achieved because my skin is pale and fair and was never meant for any amount of sun exposure.
Continue reading Confessions and regrets from a former sun worshiper
Posted Jun 18th 2006 6:25PM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Prevention, All Cancers, Books

One of the first books I read after my breast cancer diagnosis was issued in hardback in 1986 -- 20 years ago -- and then was published again and reissued and reprinted in 1990, 1998, and 2002.While the cover has changed and perhaps some wording too, the message in this book --
Love, Medicine, & Miracles by Bernie S. Siegel, M.D. -- remains unchanged. And it is inside the covers of this book that I keep learning that I have the capacity and power to become an exceptional patient -- despite the fact that I've been faced with a life-shattering diagnosis of cancer.
Continue reading Exceptional patients elevate healing to great heights
Posted Jun 9th 2006 5:09PM by Vicki Blankenship
Filed under: Childhood Cancers, Skin Cancer, Melanoma, Teen Cancers, Young Adult Cancers
The summer months are upon us which means lots of ball games, boating and fishing trips, beach vacations, and outdoor fun. That back yard swimming pool soon becomes the refuge from the heat.
Now is a great time to educate your child on the importance of lathering up with sun screen. This could keep them from getting the number one cancer in the world, skin cancer. Skin cancer is not just a cancer for the older generation. Skin cancer statistics show a rise in younger adults, teens, and children. Steps for early precautions could mean prevention.
Continue reading Educate your children about sunscreen and skin cancer