Note: The contents of this blog are for informational purposes only and should not be construed as medical advice or substitute for professional care. For medical emergencies, dial 911!
Posts with tag major
Posted Aug 16th 2007 7:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Prostate Cancer, Politics, Daily news, Sports

George Mitchell, the man leading an independent investigation of steroid use among Major League Baseball players -- he's also a former U.S. Senate Majority Leader -- has been diagnosed with prostate cancer.
"The cancer is small, low grade and localized, and can be effectively treated and cured,'' says Mitchell's physician, The prognosis is very good for Mitchell, a Democrat from Maine.
Mitchell, 73, said in a statement that he expects his treatment will not interfere with his investigation that began in March 2006 when he was appointed by MLB Commissioner Bud Selig to interview hundreds of people and review thousands of documents.
Continue reading Baseball steroid investigator George Mitchell has cancer
Posted Jun 17th 2007 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Prostate Cancer, Cancer events, Sports

Major League Baseball and the
Prostate Cancer Foundation teamed up this year to form the
Home Run Challenge in honor of Father's Day. Their gift to father's across the country: for each home run hit in 60 selected games between June 6 and today, June 17, raised money for prostate cancer, the second most common cancer for men in the United States.
Some fans of this cause made pledges; some posted online tributes to their dads at
Dockers San Francisco. For every message submitted, the company donated one dollar. Some messages were even shown in Times Square for all to see.
I just checked the status of the
Home Run Challenge on this Father's Day morning and found the most updated total of home runs to be 91. Leading the accomplishment are Ken Griffey, Jr., Alex Rodriguez, and Alfonso Soriano. The current
Team Home Run leader: the Cincinnati Reds.
Continue reading Major League Baseball, Prostate Cancer Foundation team up
Posted May 21st 2007 8:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Daily news, Sports

Oakland Athletics center fielder Nick Swisher appeared at Saturday evening's pregame event wearing three ponytails. Prepared to donate his locks to the
Pantene Beautiful Lengths non-profit campaign, Swisher said just before his ponytails were snipped,
"I feel like Pippi Longstocking. I look so goofy right now. But if I can make a difference in one or two women's lives, it's worth it."
Swisher's father -- major league baseball player Steve Swisher -- did the cutting honors. And it was fitting the two men were in on this endeavor together because Swisher's grandmother -- his dad's mother -- died from brain cancer two years ago.
"The initial idea was out of respect for my mom -- but the second thing is: It's time for a haircut,'' Steve Swisher said. "I'm so proud of Nick. He's bringing attention to a good cause and that's what it's all about.''
Pantene creates free wigs for women dealing with hair loss from cancer treatment.
Posted May 1st 2007 10:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Prevention, All Cancers, Diets, Cancer Survivors

I've passed the two-year breast cancer survival mark and finally, I'm making a major life change. Why has it taken me so long? I'm not sure. I guess the time is right and it never was before. There's no reason to dwell on what I could have done sooner. What matters is that I'm taking charge right now.
First it was soda. I totally eliminated it from my diet. It wasn't such a big hurdle, though, because it was never much of a habit. But sweets -- another story entirely.
I love -- or shall I say
loved -- sweets. Brownies, especially the gooey variety, were my favorite sugary treat. My oldest child loves them too and together, we would occasionally mix up a batch, wait impatiently while they baked, and then scarf down the whole pan.
There's a brownie mix in our pantry right now. Six-year-old Joey keeps asking me if we can make them. I keep telling him, "No, mommy is not eating sweets anymore." Which means he is not eating sweets anymore -- unless they come from a secret source. It's killing him that I won't give in and make our cherished chocolate dessert. So I promised him I will make the brownies one day soon. We have an upcoming party to attend and this will be my contribution. I just can't make them, keep them at home, and expect not to eat them.
It's been two weeks since I've consumed anything remotely sweet -- like candy, cakes, ice cream. I'm not counting sweeteners that are surely buried in the foods I normally eat -- I'll get there eventually -- but I am committed to passing on anything obviously dripping in sugar. That means no chocolate chip cookie bars that greeted me at work one day. No dipping into the mint bowls at restaurants. No bulk-sized bag of M&Ms sitting in my kitchen cupboard.
Nothing. I can't do it any other way. All or nothing. I'm going with nothing.
I like how I feel. The headaches I suspected were fueled by sugar are less frequent. My stomach feels less full. I know I am headed for better health. My kids are too. My body and my wallet should lighten up a bit too.
When I long for that sweet something, I reach for fresh fruit. Strawberries, apples, pears, bananas, and cantaloupe fill our kitchen now. Joey ate three bananas last night. I figure it would have been three brownies if he'd had the choice. For his sake and mine, I'm glad he didn't.
Posted Jan 23rd 2007 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Multiple Myeloma, Daily news

Former Cincinnati Reds pitching coach Vern Ruhle died Saturday after a year-long battle with myeloma, a cancer of the bone marrow. He was 55.
Ruhle, who missed the entire 2006 season following his diagnosis, had recently undergone stem cell transplants in hopes the procedures would successfully treat his cancer. But complications of the disease rendered the attempts unsuccessful.
Ruhle served 12 years as a major league pitching coach and worked in Houston, Philadelphia, and New York before joining the Reds in 2004. He had a career record of 67-88 with a 3.73 ERA.
Ruhle is survived by his wife, Sue, his daughter, Rebecca, his son, Kenny -- and his Cincinnati Reds family.
"The baseball and Cincinnati Reds families mourn the loss of an excellent coach, wonderful husband, and loving father," the Reds said in a statement. "In his 35 years in professional and collegiate baseball, Vern touched many people inside and outside the game. We are privileged to have been a part of his life. He will be greatly missed."
Posted Jan 7th 2007 10:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: All Cancers, Daily news

Cancer patients receiving treatment at the Arizona Cancer Center in Tucson will walk through the doors of a new building -- the Fasseas Cancer Center-- beginning tomorrow morning.
The new center, named after major donors Peter and Paula Fasseas, is built on the skeleton of a defunct Tucson hospital. It took 16 months to build and cost an estimated $30 million. And now the comprehensive cancer center is ready for use.
More than 800 cancer patients have appointments during the first week, and 110 medical staff will relocate to the new clinic that has been called the crown jewel of new University Medical Center North Campus and one of the most modern cancer treatment centers in the United States.
The new two-story clinic -- to be joined later by facilities for radiation oncology, ambulatory surgery, imaging services, and a Ronald McDonald House for pediatric patients and their families -- will feature patient support groups, counseling, therapeutic massage, a healing garden, a resource center, and a salon to help patients cope with hair loss and other side effects of cancer treatment.
A formal grand opening for the new clinic is planned for February 18.
Posted Aug 17th 2006 2:11PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Prostate Cancer, Colon and Rectal Cancer, Celebrity news

A stunned, devastated and overwhelmed Ken Griffey Jr. has learned this week that not one, but
both parents have been diagnosed with cancer. His father, former Cincinnati Reds player Ken Griffey Sr. has been diagnosed with prostate cancer and his mother, Alberta "Bertie" Griffey has been diagnosed with colon cancer. His father's prostate cancer has been discovered in its early stage but his mother is scheduled for colon cancer surgery today.
Faced with tough decisions, he is not certain if he will play baseball this week or spend time with his parents. It is reported that his mother has asked him to continue playing baseball and the Reds manager has stated it wouldn't be a problem if Griffey wanted to take time off to be with his family.
According to Medline Plus, excluding skin cancers, colorectal cancer is the
third most common cancer diagnosed in men and in women in the United States. The American Cancer Society (ACS) estimates that about 106,680 new cases of colon cancer will be diagnosed this year alone. Colorectal cancer is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States.
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer, other than skin cancers, for American men. The ACS estimates that one in six men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during his lifetime. In the US, there are approximately 1.8 million prostate cancer survivors.
Posted Jul 24th 2006 8:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Cancer events, Fundraisers, Exercise

I have committed myself to only one breast cancer fitness event at the moment. I hope to one day branch out a bit and walk and run in different festivities, in different cities, for different purposes. But for now,
Making Strides Against Breast Cancer -- sponsored by the American Cancer Society -- is my cause. Last year was my first time participating in Making Strides. I raised about $3,500 to help fund research, education, advocacy, and patient services -- and I walked the average five mile course that wound me through a quaint neighborhood in my city of Gainesville, Florida. This year, I plan to raise even more money and to run the same course. But not yet. The walk does not take place until October 14 -- which leaves me plenty of time to work on my fundraising goal and my running goal and plenty of time to help kick off this year's Making Strides.
I received my official Making Strides
Kickoff invitation in the mail today -- an invitation to attend a dinner celebration where I can learn about the latest in breast cancer news from leaders in my medical community, listen to an inspirational personal story from a breast cancer survivor, and learn more about early breast cancer detection. So my calendar is marked for August 22 when I will attend this party-of-sorts that will jump start a major event in the major fight against breast cancer -- the disease that will one day touch the life of everyone is some way. Like it has already touched mine.
Posted Jul 10th 2006 10:00PM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Lung Cancer, Prevention, All Cancers, Research, Smoking, Daily news

It is estimated that 1.25 billion men and women currently smoke cigarettes. And if this trend holds steady, tobacco will kill 1 billion people by the end of the century -- 10 times the amount of people who died from tobacco in the 20th century. Every one in five cancer deaths results from tobacco use -- worldwide, that's 1.4 million tobacco-related deaths every year. And lung cancer remains the major cancer among the 10.9 million new cases that are diagnosed annually. All this comes from the Cancer Atlas -- updated and released today along with the Tobacco Atlas and published by the
American Cancer Society with assistance from the
International Union Against Cancer, World Health Organization, and U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
While improving nutrition and reducing infection can dramatically reduce cancer rates, reducing tobacco use would have the greatest global affect the number of cancer deaths. And if action is taken now, 2 million lives could be saved each year by 2020 and 6.5 million lives by 2040.
Posted Jul 7th 2006 12:50PM by Vicki Blankenship
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Pink products, Cancer events, Events, Fundraisers
Players wearing pink helmets to support the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation will take the field in a major league lacrosse All Star game in Boston. Following the game, the autographed helmets will be auctioned off to raise money for the foundation. Each helmet has a player's team logo, a breast cancer ribbon and the player's name.
The Cascade company is a large manufacturer of both women's and men's lacrosse equipment with helmets sold anywhere between $69 to $249 in value. They also make helmets for other sports including field hockey and white water rafting. The Cascade Water Rescue Helmet is the top rated helmet in water rescue.
Go online to www.majorleaguelacrosse.com and www.cascadelacrosse.com to bid on the pink helmets being autographed by the players in the All Star lacrosse game. The auction ends July 20.
Posted Jun 25th 2006 10:00PM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Chemotherapy, Diets

When my treatment for breast cancer was just around the corner, I asked a nurse about a dietitian on staff who I might talk to -- or a nutritionist or anyone who could help me wrap my head around eating right and staying healthy and maintaining my weight during treatment. I was told that I didn't need to talk to anyone -- that I would likely not lose any weight and would be fine. I was aware at the time that a referral to a dietitian often occurs with weight loss associated with treatment -- but it seemed that a referral for merely staying on track was just as important. Yet this seemed not to be an issue. And I never was referred to anyone. So I found someone on my own -- and independent nutritionist who came to my house just after my first dose of chemotherapy, on a day when I felt nauseated and foggy and sick. It was a perfect time to talk to someone about how to eat during this difficult time, and the wisdom that was shared with me is as fresh in my mind today as it was 18 months ago -- when I sat at my dining room table with my mom and a young woman who knew exactly what I wanted to know.
Continue reading Nutritionist offers important insight about staying on track
Posted Jun 16th 2006 8:00AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Prostate Cancer, Prevention, Cancer events, Celebrity spokesperson

This Father's Day, as part of Major League Baseball's Prostate Cancer Foundation's
Home Run Challenge, the seventh-inning stretch will be moved to the sixth inning to symbolize that one out of six men in the country will be diagnosed with prostate cancer. In addition, players, managers, coaches, trainers, umpires and groundskeepers will raise awareness and show support by wearing blue wristbands, blue ribbon uniform decals, blue eye glare and temporary blue ribbon tattoos.
"People are starting to age. We're just trying to make sure that people are aware of how important it is to get the message out and have guys talk about it, because as men, sometimes we're reluctant to talk about health issues," states Home Run Challenge spokesperson Ozzie Smith. "Being part of the baby boomers, this falls right into our lap. It's important to at least make an effort to make people more aware of how important it is to get checked. When we talk to them when they're 40 to 45, by the time they get to 50, they'll be ready to take the plunge to get things done."
See, you could take your dad to a ballgame and he could learn all about the need to be screened for prostate cancer without you trying to find a way to work the subject of your dad's prostate into conversation. For some, that conversation might be an easy one to have with dad. But for others, saying "Happy Father's Day and have you thought about your prostate lately," might seem awkward. Does Hallmark even make a card for that conversation? A day at the ballpark seems a clever solution.
Posted May 4th 2006 10:10AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Prevention

On Mother's Day, the Atlanta Braves
and the Susan G. Komen Foundation will wrap up a week of breast cancer charity fundraising by hosting Breast Cancer
Awareness Day. Breast cancer survivors will receive a free ticket to the game that day, attend a pre-game hospitality
reception, and be given an Atlanta Braves Breast Cancer Awareness t-shirt. Also, before the game, breast cancer
survivors -- with family and friends -- will participate in a Walk in the Park parade around the field and a field
ceremony to celebrate breast cancer survivors. There will be an Atlanta Braves 50/50 raffle to benefit the Atlanta
2-Day Walk for Breast Cancer. The Shades of Pink Breast Cancer Mass Choir will sing the National Anthem. For more
information, visit the
Atlanta Braves website.
Posted Apr 30th 2006 7:00AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Childhood Cancers, Skin Cancer, Melanoma, Prevention

For sun worshipper Shonda Schilling, being diagnosed with Stage 2 melanoma was an unbelievable shock and a
life-changing wake up call to the dangers of too much sun. As a result, Shonda and her husband Curt Schilling -- former
Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher -- founded the Shade Foundation in a mission to eradicate melanoma through the education of
children and the community in the prevention and detection of skin cancer and the promotion of sun safety.
The Shade Foundation provides shade structures for recreational areas on school grounds, and offers an extensive
online resource of educational information and programs to raise awareness for sun safety. According to the American
Academy of Dermatology and Shade Foundation, skin cancer is an unrecognized epidemic. Statistically, one in five
Americans will develop skin cancer, and the diagnosis of younger adults with skin cancer has increased sharply. Half of
all new cancers in the United States are skin cancers.
To be sun safe when going outdoors, they recommend
sunscreen, a broad-brimmed hat and sunglasses. And stay away from tanning beds -- because occasional yet intense UVA
exposure from tanning beds actually poses a greater risk of melanoma skin cancer than does spending long hours in the
sun. To learn more about sun safe activities for kids and young adults, programs, educational materials, and creating
shade, visit the
Shade Foundation.
Posted Apr 29th 2006 5:45PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Brain Cancer, Melanoma
"The reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated." -- Mark Twain
According to
several international news services and tabloid newspapers with an online presence, Elizabeth Taylor, legendary movie
star and cancer survivor, is suffering
heart failure and near
death. Reported to be bedridden at her home in Bel Air, California, she is said to have cancelled her annual Easter
party to
plan her funeral. According to an unnamed friend,
"Liz is inching closer to death every day and she knows it. It is not a pretty picture. She's not leaving a lot of
money to her children. She wants the bulk of her fortune to go to AIDS research." I guess dying isn't enough of a
news story, a publisher decided to add this
scurrilous gossipy little comment from an
anonymous friend on how her estate will be settled. Other than her attorneys and estate planners, I doubt few
know the status of her will.
Her publicist, Dick Guttman, states that Taylor is
not near death, and is instead, quite
busy with her successful perfume and jewelry lines and the work she does for AIDS. "The endless health stories
surrounding Taylor's supposed impending death," Guttman says, "have just become exasperating." Mark
Twain predicted this one right. I cannot find any credible reports indicating that Guttman is playing smoke and mirrors
with the public. All the reports of Taylor's impending death do seem to be coming from very specific, and perhaps
slightly questionable, sources for news information. My vote for accuracy goes to Guttman. We send her our best wishes
for continued good health.
Next Page >