CANCER

Mar 16 2026HEALTH

Helping Hands: A Survivor’s Way to Ease New Diagnoses

A 70‑year‑old man who has beat prostate cancer twice now stands in a clinic lobby to help men who have just been told they might have the same disease. He sits on the third floor of a urology practice in Charlotte, North Carolina, where he gives out handouts about symptoms, support groups and hea

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Mar 15 2026HEALTH

Discovering and Fighting Breast Cancer in Today’s World

Breast cancer stands as the most frequent cancer among women, yet men can also be affected in rare cases. Its causes are mixed: genes, lifestyle choices, hormones, and the surrounding environment all play a part. Early signs vary widely, which makes spotting the disease early a real challenge

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Mar 13 2026HEALTH

Living Smarter After a Cancer Diagnosis

Kate, who is 44, talked about how she changed her habits two years after learning she had cancer. She said that since the diagnosis, she has cut back on alcohol. At a London bar, when offered a drink, she declined and explained that she is now very careful about what she drinks. Experts say

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Mar 13 2026HEALTH

Colon Cancer in Young People: New Clues About Stiff Tissues

The death of a well‑known actor at 48 from colon cancer has highlighted a worrying rise in the disease among people under 50. Researchers at two Texas universities have found that tumors in younger patients grow in tissues that feel firmer than normal. This stiffness is linked to changes in collagen

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Mar 13 2026HEALTH

Women in Zambia: How a Worm Disease May Raise Cervical Cancer Risk

In Zambia, many women face two health threats that can work together. One is a parasite called Schistosoma haematobium, which lays eggs in the body and can end up in the female reproductive organs. The other is human papillomavirus (HPV), a common virus that can cause cervical cancer if it stays in

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Mar 11 2026HEALTH

Patient Paths: How Mind, Body and Life Shape Recovery After Head‑and‑Neck Cancer

The study looks at people who have survived head and neck cancer and asks how their lives change after treatment. Researchers followed patients from just after therapy onward, measuring their overall well‑being every few months. They found that a patient’s quality of life is not only about medica

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Mar 06 2026HEALTH

Lung Cancer Care Shows Racial Gaps That Haven’t Closed

Recent research on Medicare patients with early‑stage lung cancer reveals a troubling trend: Black individuals are still far less likely to receive surgery or radiation that can cure the disease than their white counterparts. The study, which looked at more than 28, 000 cases from 2005 to 2019, foun

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Mar 05 2026HEALTH

Bringing Cancer Drugs into Everyday Care

Countries are now finding ways to put life‑saving cancer medicines onto their health lists. The move follows a global guide that tells governments which drugs are most essential for treating common illnesses. By adding these medicines to national plans, health workers can give patients the right tre

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Mar 03 2026HEALTH

Familial Colon Cancer: A New Way to Watch and Prevent

People who have a family history of colon cancer face higher chances of getting the disease. About one in four cases comes from inherited changes in genes that protect DNA, like those seen in Lynch syndrome or familial adenomatous polyposis. Even though doctors can screen for tumors early, it is sti

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Mar 03 2026HEALTH

Young People Face Rising Rectal Cancer Rates

"Recent data shows a growing number of people under 65 being diagnosed with colorectal cancer, especially rectal cases. While older adults are seeing fewer cancers, the overall trend is upward across all ages. In fact, rectal tumors now make up almost one‑third of colorectal cases, a jump from 27 %

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