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Posts with tag host
Posted Jul 22nd 2007 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Celebrity news

We know her best as the spunky headband-wearing contestant on
Survivor: The Australian Outback and most recently as the vivacious co-host on the daytime talk show
The View. Elisabeth Hasselbeck is a fighter -- whether she's duking it out to win $1 million or defending herself in front of a television audience. Remember her on-screen political feud with Rosie O'Donnell just before O'Donnell's departure from
The View?
Hasselbeck seems sweet and innocent. I'm sure she is, really. But she surely has the ability to stand her own ground. She owes this trait to her mom, she says.
"My senior year of high school, my mother was diagnosed with an advanced from of breast cancer," says Hasselbeck, now 30. "She was put on intensive chemotherapy and had to take time off from her job as an attorney. Suddenly, I was the grown-up: I took her to her first chemo appointment, and helped her shave her head. The experience taught me a lot about looking inside for strength."
Continue reading The View's Elisabeth Hasselbeck on surviving cancer
Posted Mar 29th 2007 10:30AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Cancer events, All Cancers, Fundraisers, Daily news, Celebrity news

Patrick Wayne, son of late actor John Wayne, says Larry King has true grit. And that's why the CNN talk show host will receive the True Grit Award next month, an honor that hails from the John Wayne Cancer Institute.
King, 73, will receive his honor at the annual Odyssey Ball on April 14 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. Jamie Lee Curtis will host the event that will commemorate the centennial of John Wayne's birth.
The Odyssey Ball began 22 years ago and has helped raise more the $14 million to support the John Wayne Cancer Institute's research and treatment programs.
"Larry King epitomizes the strengths and qualities that characterized my father, and for which the True Grit Award was created," said Wayne, who serves as chairman of the board at the institute, located at the Saint John's Health Center in Santa Monica.
Founded by the Wayne family in 1981, the institute honors John Wayne who died of stomach cancer in 1979.
Posted Mar 25th 2007 11:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Colon and Rectal Cancer, Politics, Daily news, Celebrity news, Cancer Survivors, Surgery

White House press secretary and colon cancer survivor Tony Snow asks the public to refrain from jumping to conclusions regarding the surgery he will have on Monday to remove a growth from his lower abdomen.
Blood tests and a CAT scan of the growth show no presence of cancer, he reports. But still, he and doctors are proceeding cautiously due to his history.
Snow, a former Fox News radio and television talk show host, was diagnosed with cancer two years ago, when he was a commentator at Fox. Two months after surgery, he returned to the air and then became White House press secretary in April 2006.
Snow's plan is to be back behind the podium a few weeks after surgery, when he has a better idea of what it is he's dealing with.
Posted Jan 29th 2007 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson

Angelina Jolie, who told CNN host Larry King on
December 18 that her 56-year-old mother was battling ovarian cancer, is now confirming that her mother passed away on Saturday afternoon.
According to a new release, Angelina Jolie and brother James Haven were with their mom, actress Marcheline Bertrand, when she died this weekend at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. It is reported that Jolie's boyfriend, Brad Pitt, was at the hospital with Jolie and her brother.
Bertrand, divorced from Jolie's Oscar-winning actor father Jon Voight and primary caretaker of her children, had small roles in the movies
Lookin' to Get Out in 1982 and
The Man Who Loved Women in 1983.
A private funeral is planned -- and the family asks that donations be made to the
Women's Cancer Research Institute at Cedars-Sinai.
Posted Jan 26th 2007 5:25PM by Kristina Collins
Filed under: Leukemia, Drug, Blood Cancer, Research, Cancer Survivors
Noxafil (posaconazole), an anti- fungal agent may be better than other anti-fungals in helping cancer patients that have GVHD.
GVHD, graft-versus host disease, is a potential complication that can happen after a stem cell transplant. What is really happening is that the new stem cells given from a donor are now giving the patient a chance to build a new immune system--hopefully one that will give a cure. The foreign immune system can begin to attack the cancer patients body that received the transplant. Just like your immune system might reject a heart transplant, the new immune system is seeing the organs of the body as foreign and attack.
To combat this from happening the patients are usually given agents that suppress the immune system. This however, can then cause infections that can quickly develop into a life threatening situation. Researchers are continuing to look for ways to combat the infections that arise.
Noxafil was compared to Diflucan in a study of 600 patients with GVHD who were also receiving therapy to suppress their immune system. The anti-fungal agent that won out was Noxafil for the prevention of fungal infections.
Posted Jan 11th 2007 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Pancreatic Cancer, Television, Daily news, Celebrity in memoriam

Magnus Magnusson, former host of the BBC quiz show
Mastermind, died just days ago after a four-month battle with pancreatic cancer. He died peacefully at his Glasgow home at the age of 77.
Magnusson, a journalist, author, and presenter, is best known for his 25 years of work on
Mastermind, a show he called an "undemanding program for insomniac academics late at night." His presence defined the program, a prime time BBC show watched by more than 22 million viewers, from 1972 until 1997.
"Magnus Magnusson was one of the defining faces and voices of the BBC," said Mark Thompson, the director general of the BBC. "To the contestants of Mastermind, he was a tough but always fair question-master, but behind this screen persona there was a family man of tremendous warmth and humanity."
Magnusson, who focused on his writing career after Mastermind ratings began to slump and a new host took his place, first became ill in 2004 when he was hospitalized for emergency abdominal surgery. He recovered from this episode but was diagnosed with cancer last October, on his 77th birthday.
Magnusson, who coined the quiz show phrase, "I've started, so I'll finish," is survived by his wife of 52 years and his four children.
Posted Dec 21st 2006 12:00PM by Kristina Collins
Filed under: Leukemia, Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma, Prevention, Hodgkin's Lymphoma, Blood Cancer, Stem Cell, Research, Cancer Survivors
Graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) is a complication that can occur after a stem cell transplant. GvHD occurs when infection-fighting cells from the donor recognize the patient's body as being different or foreign. These infection-fighting cells then attack tissues in the patient's body just as if they were attacking an infection. GvHD is often treated with steroids, though this does not always work. GvHD is a serious condition with a high death rate so researchers are constantly evaluating new ways to treat it or reduce the symptoms.
European researchers conducted a study to see if a certain type of stem cell, infused into patients with GvHD that are not responding to treatment, would be effective. Patients were treated with mesenchymal stem cells, that are specific types of stems cells that are collected from the bone marrow of a donor. These stem cells are thought to help suppress the donor's immune cells and reduce the risk of GvHD.
The researcher found that 68 percent of the patients responded, children having slightly better results. They concluded that treatment with mesenchymal stem cells appears to effectively treat recurrent GvHD that would otherwise have been fatal in a majority of patients.
Posted Dec 16th 2006 10:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Ovarian Cancer, Television, Daily news, Celebrity news

Angelina Jolie -- making even more headlines than usual as she speaks openly about falling in love with Brad Pitt -- has confirmed that her mother is battling ovarian cancer.
Jolie says in an upcoming interview with CNN host Larry King that her 56-year-old mom, Marcheline Bertrand, is doing good -- and she expects her to win her fight against the disease.
"She has fought for six years and she's a remarkable woman, she's very, very strong and her spirit remains unbroken."
Jolie's Larry King interview will air on Monday, December 18.
Posted Dec 11th 2006 11:00AM by Kristina Collins
Filed under: Childhood Cancers, Leukemia, Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma, Hodgkin's Lymphoma, Blood Cancer, Stem Cell, Research
Children that undergo bone marrow transplants can develop life threatening infections while the immune system is trying to regenerating itself. St. Jude Children's Research Hospital thinks they have found a better way to harvest stem cells that are more vigorous in reproducing and rebuilding the immune system. These stem cells would reduce the time it takes for the immune system to rebuild--reducing the risk of infection.
When harvesting the donated bone marrow a specific antibody is used to find the vigorous stem cells that mature and reproduce faster. They found that using a new antibody along with the one already used might prove to have better results in capturing the best stem cells needed. This could help the donated bone marrow to take hold faster and lessen the risk of the time children are exposed to serious infections.
Although the studies so far have been done on mice, the researchers believe that this is promising information that with further studies can translate into better treatment for children that need to undergo a bone marrow transplant.
Posted Oct 22nd 2006 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Celebrity fundraisers, Events, Fundraisers, Books, Television

Monday night is
Courage Night, hosted by the
Young Survival Coalition (YSC), national sorority
Zeta Tau Alpha (ZTA), and Lifetime television. It's a night when Lifetime's Original Movie
Why I Wore Lipstick to My Mastectomy will air, when crowds will gather in communities and on college campuses across the nation for special screenings and viewing parties of the movie that brings glaring attention to the issue of breast cancer.
Courage Night was created in 2004 by Geralyn Lucas, author of the book
Why I Wore Lipstick to My Mastectomy, as an evening of celebration in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month. It was also a celebration of the publication of her then-new book.
Lucas, diagnosed with breast cancer at age 27, recounts in her memoir every step of her cancer journey, including her bold application of red lipstick just before her mastectomy. She knew from the day she was diagnosed she would speak out to help others, to raise awareness, to make a difference. Now 39, a mother of two, and an executive for Lifetime, Lucas is still making waves. And Courage Night lives on.
Courage Night has grown into a national grassroots event that honors breast cancer survivors and those lost to the disease. Event fundraising will benefit YSC -- the only organization dedicated to the special issues of young breast cancer survivors.
Why I Wore Lipstick to My Mastectomy, starring actress Sarah Chalke, will air Monday, October 23 at 9:00 PM.
Posted Oct 4th 2006 11:33AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Blogs, Television, Celebrity news, Cancer Survivors

On Monday, the sublimely hilarious Ellen DeGeneres, whose mother is a breast cancer survivor, dedicated her show to Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
During the monologue, Ellen discussed the philosophy of laughter being the best medicine, and in her uniquely funny way gave an example to support this view by stating that Elton John is proof that looking through rose-colored glasses will alter your optimism because Elton John is a very happy person.
She imparted wisdom that being in a good mood makes your body feel better, that optimistic people heal quicker and that
positivity is an energy you cannot see but is very real. Again, Ellen provided an example of how this works when she compared what happens when you hug someone who is wearing too much perfume and you walk away smelling like the perfume. Energy is like that. It rubs off on others.
Breast cancer survivor Sheryl Crow appeared on the show, as did Christina Applegate, whose mother is a breast cancer survivor. Four audience members had their hair cut on television and donated the locks to Pantene's Beautiful Lengths. Pantene's Beautiful Lengths makes wigs for women with cancer.
Ellen blogs her monologues and other tidbits of information and this month, her
website provides breast cancer information.
A few breast cancer fast facts:
- One out of eight women in the United States will develop breast cancer. In 1960 it was one out of 14.
- An estimated 212,920 new cases of invasive breast cancer are expected to occur among women in the US during 2006. This does not take DCIS into account.
- An estimated 41,430 breast cancer deaths are anticipated this year.
- Female breast cancer rates have continued to increase, although at a slower rate than in years past.
- Breast cancer is the most common form of cancer in American women.
- Breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer death for women 40-55 years of age.
- There are 2 million women living in the U.S. who have been diagnosed and treated for breast cancer.
- There are another 1 million women living with breast cancer who have not yet been diagnosed.
- Every woman is at risk for breast cancer, and that risk increases with age. About 77 percent of breast cancer diagnoses occur in women age 50 and older.
- Seventy percent of breast cancers occur in women who have no identifiable risk factors.
As Ellen told the audience of breast cancer survivors, "We can beat this thing."
Posted Aug 19th 2006 12:30PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Thyroid Cancer, Television, Celebrity news

Back in June, Roger Ebert, a three-time thyroid cancer survivor, underwent surgery to remove a cancerous growth on his salivary gland. In July, due to complications from the surgery, he was admitted again into the hospital when a blood vessel burst. Surgeons performed a life-saving emergency procedure to correct the complication. Reports at that time indicated Ebert was in serious but stable condition.
Ebert continues to recover in the hospital. Recently,
he explained that the blood vessel rupture was due to breakdown of tissue near the artery as a result of aggressive and intense radiation treatments, called neutron beam radiation, three years ago. He is working to strengthen his vocal cords.
In June, when Ebert, who is 63, first went in for surgery, he said, "This is not considered to be a life-threatening form of cancer, and I expect to make a full recovery. I'll continue to function as a film critic during this time." With this recent explanation on how his recovery is progressing, he said, "I don't have a crystal ball, so I can't tell you when, but I sure look forward to being back on the movie beat,'' and he wanted all his fans to know that he is grateful for the good wishes and support.
For more information and related posts:
Roger Ebert: movie critic cancer survivor battling cancer againRoger Ebert: suffers serious cancer surgery setbackJay Leno thumbs up as guest host for Roger EbertPosted Jul 17th 2006 4:13PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Lung Cancer, Celebrity in memoriam

Theater, film and television actress Carrie Nye, wife of television talk show host Dick Cavett, has lost her life to lung cancer.
In 1965, she was nominated for a Tony Award for the musical
Half a Sixpence, and in 1980 she was nominated for an Emmy Award for her portrayal of Tallulah Bankhead in the television movie
The Scarlett O'Hara War. Her humor and accent were often compared with that of Tallulah Bankhead.
She performed at the Williamstown Theater Festival in northern Massachusetts from 1955 until the late 1970s with leads in
A Streetcar Named Desire,
The Skin of Our Teeth and
Nude With Violin.
"Carrie Nye will be remembered as a woman whose vibrant spirit and wonderful acting in many roles enriched the Festival," said Roger Rees, Williamstown's artistic director. "On a personal note, I fondly remember many summer afternoons spent at her home in Montauk where she reminisced about Tennessee Williams visits to the Berkshires and his great affection for the Williamstown Theatre Festival."
She appeared in films which included
Creep Show and
Hello Again, as well as the CBS daytime soap
Guiding Light. Nye was 69.
Posted May 29th 2006 11:11AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Prevention, Diets, Cancer prevention foods, Books, Television

As we become more aware that we are what we eat and what we eat affects our immediate and long-term health, we are making healthier choices with an eye on nutrition and weight loss. You choose granola instead of sugary breakfast cereals, salad instead of the cheeseburger, dried fruit, yogurt-covered nuts and banana chips instead of a candy bar. But nutritionist Joy Bauer warns that some of the foods we consider the healthier choices, might be so loaded in sugars, fats and calories that we are defeating our purpose of being healthy without realizing it.
Bauer appeared on NBC's Today show with Al Roker, and gave some examples of foods that are considered healthier choices but might not be -- and offered some suggestions on alternatives.
- Granola, loaded with sugar, is one of the most calorie-dense cereals. Bauer suggests you keep your portions small, and mix it with cereals with less calories and sugar such as Bran Flakes or Cheerios.
- Salad, such as a typical Caesar salad, with dressing, croutons and cheese topping, has 1,130 calories and 90 grams of fat. Bauer suggests that you request a salad with no dressing and no croutons. Instead, use an olive oil and vinegar dressing.
- Dried fruit is higher in calories that fresh fruit. Bauer's example -- 12 small pieces of dried mango have 320 calories, which equals the same as 2 apples, 15 grapes, and half of a small cantaloupe combined.
- Yogurt-covered nuts have little is any redeeming nutritional value. Loaded with sugar, fat, and no active cultures, 20 yogurt covered nuts contain 460 calories, 32 grams fat, 14 grams saturated fat, and 8 teaspoons sugar.
- Banana chips are fried in oil and sugar. One cup of banana chips has 300 calories, 20 grams fat, 18 grams saturated fat, and 19 grams sugar, or 4 3/4 teaspoons of sugar. Bauer's common sense solution? Eat a real banana. It has 110 calories and no added fat or sugar.
To learn more about foods that might seem good for you but aren't, and foods that are good for you, visit
Joy Bauer Nutrition,
life is hard, food should be easy.Posted May 7th 2006 5:33AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Prevention

Shannon Harken wrote an essay to nominate her mother, Sue Myers of Pleasantville, Iowa, as the most amazing mother in the world because of her mother's zest for life and the positive example she set while battling breast cancer. Of the more than 14,000 Mom's the Word essay submissions, Kohl's unveiled the ten most amazing role model mom finalists of the contest and Harken's essay about her mother placed Myers in the top ten moms of the year. Ultimately, America will vote to decide who will be this year's number one amazing mom. All ten essays are featured at Kohl's, where you can vote for the essay and mother you feel best deserves to win.
The role model with the most votes will earn a $5,000 shopping spree, a style transformation, and will be escorted by Daisy Fuentes on a trip to Fashion Week in Los Angeles. In addition, Kohl's and Fuentes will honor the grand prize winner during a ceremony in her hometown on May 13. All mothers are amazing, but I went and voted for Myers. Knowing what she has been through by way of the fact I am a breast cancer survivor and I know what I went through -- I would like to see her win and enjoy a day of special recognition, pampering and fun. Voting ends May 8. Shannon's essay about her mother Sue is cute. It's number #2. Go
here to vote.