e-Briefing;
Click Here; Cancer Awareness; Sites cover prevention and treatment
as well as coping techniques.
The Los Angeles
Times; Los Angeles, Calif.; Oct 18, 2001; MICHELLE MALTAIS;
Whether
you know it or not, many healthy habits are intended to protect
against cancer. Folks slather on the sunscreen, obsess about
eating right and working out and berate smokers. Experts have
concluded that as much as 80% of all cancers are caused by bad
health habits, according to a UC Irvine Web site. At http://www.yourcancerrisk.harvard.edu,
you can assess your risk for different kinds of cancer, including
colon, breast and stomach, in a relatively unscientific way.
You
answer a few questions, and the site produces a rank (above
average, for example) and recommendations for prevention. But
the minimum age you can enter is 40. The assessment is based
on the findings of the Risk Index Working Group at Harvard University.
At
http://cancernet.nci.nih.gov/bcra_tool.html, you can check your
risk for breast cancer using a test developed by scientists
at the National Cancer Institute and the National Surgical Adjuvant
Breast and Bowel Project. The tool projects a woman's individual
estimate of breast cancer risk over a five-year period and over
her lifetime. It's a bit more scientific, and it assesses the
risk for women 35 and older.
This
month marks the 16th anniversary of National Breast Cancer Awareness
Month, with Friday declared National Mammography Day. The disease
kills more than 40,000 women a year. More than 2 million survive
breast cancer, according to the American Cancer Society.
Y-Me
National Breast Cancer Organization's Web site, at http://www.y-me.org/english.htm,
links to NexCura's Breast Cancer Profiler and also helps explain
pathology reports.
At
http://www.breastcancer.org,
you'll find guides, personal and medical, including chats. There's
one tonight at 6:30 on quality of life for women affected by
breast cancer.
For
all types of cancer, the American Cancer Society has a very
good site, at http://www.cancer.org,
that walks patients, relatives and survivors through the process,
from diagnosis to treatment to recovery. It also lists local
resources and related news.
The
University of Pennsylvania cancer site, at http://www.oncolink.upenn.edu,
offers a wealth of information. It explains in plain terms the
various types of cancer such as lymphomas and myelomas, separated
into adult and pediatric categories. Oncolink also covers treatment
and coping.
At
http://www.cancerfacts.com,
NexCura provides its Cancer Profiler, an interactive tool for
personalized treatment-planning information based on published
medical studies. Patients enter specifics about their medical
history and preferences. The profiler then compares this information
with data in its database of peer- reviewed clinical studies
and generates a report that is specific to the situation.
MayoClinic.com
lists cancer-coping techniques and interactive tools, for which
you have to register, at http://www.mayohealth.org/home?id=3.1.5.
For
emotional support, patients and survivors can goto http://www.cancersurvivors.org/support/emotional/chat,.htm.
It provides a series of free community activities such as a
message board, chat room, photo album and links. Cancersurvivors.org
covers issues of emotional, physical and financial support.
Treating
and beating cancer can get costly.
If you're looking for clinical trials, there are several across
the Web.
·
You can check out http://cancer.ucsd.edu/level2/clintri.htm
for clinical trials at UC San Diego and beyond. There's also
http://cancernet.nci.nih.gov,
offering current and comprehensive information from the National
Cancer Institute, the federal government's principal agency
for cancer research. The site, like others, details types of
cancer, treatment, clinical trials, risk factors, prevention
and coping.
·
* At http://www.centerwatch.com,
you'll find an extensive list of international clinical trials.
It also lists therapies recently approved by the Food and Drug
Administration.
·
The Clinical Trials Matching System at http://www.canceranswers.org
matches breast cancer patients to trial information in California,
based on stage of disease, previous treatment and other criteria.
· There's also NeedyMeds, at http://www.needymeds.com,
where you can find out how to qualify for inexpensive or free
medications.
· Michelle Maltais is a broadcast producer and copy editor
at The Times. She can be reached at michelle.maltais@latimes.com.