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Posts with tag minogue
Posted Jan 15th 2007 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Daily news, Celebrity news, Cancer Survivors

The flu is what caused Australian pop star Kylie Minogue to cut a live London show short on Saturday. Her cancellation had nothing to do with breast cancer, her spokesman says.
Minogue, who was diagnosed with breast cancer in May 2005, has endured both surgery and chemotherapy and is back on the
Showgirl Homecoming Tour she had to postpone just after her diagnosis. The revival of her tour represents Minogue's cancer comeback -- and this recent health setback is nothing more than a temporary bout with the flu. It is reported that several of her band members also have the bug.
Minogue, 38, kicked off the British leg of her tour on New Year's Eve. She has already played seven dates at London's Wembley Arena.
Posted Dec 26th 2006 3:54PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Celebrity news, Cancer Survivors

By popular vote, Australia's beloved pop diva and breast cancer survivor has been chosen as the
most inspirational celebrity of 2006. Sugar magazine teen readers indicated that Minogue represents their first choice as an inspirational role model for young women.
From the beginning of her breast cancer diagnosis, Minogue has shared her very personal battle with breast cancer in a very public way, raising awareness for the disease among a younger generation of women whose attention to breast health might not have been as focused otherwise.
Earlier this month, Minogue was named the Gold Choice Celebrity of the Year in the Sydney Confidential People's Choice Awards by Australia's Daily Telegraph readers.
For a retrospective of Kylie Minogue's breast cancer journey:
Posted Oct 23rd 2006 11:30PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Celebrity cancer diagnosis, Cancer Survivors

When Australian pop star Kylie Minogue was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2005, there was a sudden surge in the number of young women requesting breast cancer screening. Minogue's breast cancer diagnosis at the age of 37 raised concern among a younger population of women that breast cancer is a diagnosis that could potentially happen to them. Knowledge is power and education saves lives. The increase in breast cancer awareness became known as the Kylie Effect.
However, the awareness that younger women can develop breast cancer has led some women to age-related conclusions about breast cancer that are not true, and this is also being referred to as the Kylie Effect. According to a
recent survey of 2,289 women conducted by Cancer Research UK, 77 percent of the survey participants said that breast cancer risk was higher for women under the age of 70, and 33 percent said that women under the age of 50 were most at risk. The fact is cancer risk increases with age, and four out of five women diagnosed with breast cancer are over the age of 50.
"Celebrities with breast cancer like Kylie Minogue and Caron Keating have attracted a lot of publicity -- especially in magazines aimed at younger women. This is very beneficial in that it raises awareness of breast cancer. But the down side is that it may also set up a chain of panic among young women, while misleading older women to think that ageing is not a relevant factor in breast cancer," stated Dr Lesley Walker of Cancer Research UK.
For a retrospective of Kylie Minogue's breast cancer journey:
What should younger women do to be breast cancer smart? Do a monthly self exam and if they notice any abnormalities or lumps, insist that tests be done to rule out breast cancer. Realize that while any woman at any age can get breast cancer, the chances increase with age and 80 percent of breast cancer diagnosis happen for women 50 years and older.
Posted Sep 21st 2006 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Books, Daily news, Celebrity news, Cancer Survivors
I was busy during my treatment for breast cancer -- really busy. My two little boys kept me in an always-moving, rarely-resting state and while I sometimes felt desperate for a little down time, I am mostly thankful for the crazy pace that kept me focused, kept me occupied, kept me distracted. Staying busy helped pass the time during a phase of my life when moments could crawl at a snail's pace.
According to the Sun newspaper, Kylie Minogue searched for something to keep her occupied during her own breast cancer treatment. What she found -- writing -- has turned her into an author. Minogue's new children's book --
Kylie: The Showgirl Princess -- which she created with her partner Olivier Martinez, kept her mind off her treatments and on the future. And the future she set her sights on during treatment has almost arrived as Minogue's book is set for release this week. Her book, that includes artwork sent to her after her diagnosis from children all over the world, will be on shelves in London today.
Posted Aug 25th 2006 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Pancreatic Cancer, Prevention, Celebrity spokesperson, All Cancers, Daily news, Celebrity news, Cancer Survivors

Celebrities have a way of motivating the public to take action. They help dictate fashion trends and set standards for mostly unattainable body shapes and sizes. They add hype to political views and philosophies and make influential statements about all sorts of issues. Like breast cancer. With its backing from celebrities like Melissa Etheridge and Sheryl Crow and Kylie Minogue -- all breast cancer survivors who are speaking out and raising awareness -- breast cancer has burst onto the media scene and is receiving powerful, positive attention. Kylie Minogue's public diagnosis spurred so many women into getting their breasts checked that the
Medical Journal of Australia reports a 40 percent increase in bookings for mammograms. But sometimes, celebrity diagnoses don't elicit a response at all.
Italian tenor Luciano Pavarotti was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer last month -- yet the announcement barely registered on the public's radar. Perhaps he does not command the same kind of reaction as pop singers do. Or perhaps it's the type of cancer that keeps his public battle on the sidelines.
The breasts are a visible icon of femininity -- out in the forefront for all to see. And so the issue of breast cancer is in the forefront. The pancreas, on the other hand, are hidden behind the stomach and are out of sight -- and out of mind. When Apple chief executive Steve Jobs was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2004, he didn't even know where to find his pancreas. And so this organ does not attract much fanfare -- and therefore does not attract the funding and research that breast cancer does. Which is sad because this cancer is not just hidden inside the body. It's also a hidden killer. It can't be felt like breasts can be felt. And there is no easy way to detect it, like with mammogram and other imaging techniques. Often a diagnosis of pancreatic cancer -- the fourth leading cause of cancer death in Western societies -- comes with a death sentence. And more and more, breast cancer diagnoses come with promising expectations of survival.
We may not know as much as about pancreatic cancer as we do breast cancer. But there are some behaviors that may contribute to this deadly disease. So in the spirit of prevention, consider this:
- If nobody smoked, 25 percent of pancreatic cancer cases wouldn't happen.
- Alcohol consumption can increase the risk by 15 times.
- Some studies link high meat consumption and low vegetable consumption to incidences of pancreatic cancer.
- Folate, the B vitamin in green leafy vegetables, oranges, legumes, and whole grains seem to reduce the risk. But folate supplements don't seem to have the same healthy effect.
Posted Aug 6th 2006 1:08PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Celebrity news, Cancer Survivors

Australian pop star and breast cancer survivor Kylie Minogue has lost her close friend and chauffeur Nigel McCarroll to cancer. McCarroll supported Minogue through her cancer struggles into cancer survivorship. Attending the funeral, she laid a wreath in the shape of his favourite Audi car at the crematorium service, according to Movie & Entertainment News provided by World Entertainment News Network.
A friend is quoted as saying, "Kylie was devastated that the disease Nigel helped her fight took his life."
Being a cancer survivor is bittersweet, when some of those you are close to, or become close to during cancer treatments and recovery, do not make it with you. There is always a lining of sadness to the celebrations of being alive, of beating cancer, of knowing you survived cancer. You do not forget the ones who are lost to cancer.
In honoring the memory of those who walked with you, you do not allow yourself to forget. And in those times, when you lose someone close who journeyed along side you in the fight to live, being a survivor holds little in triumphant feelings when you know that someone else fighting the same disease did not make it. You question the fairness of life -- and realize it is not fair at all.
Posted Jul 31st 2006 3:33PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Celebrity news, Cancer Survivors

I will be honest. After a double mastectomy left my chest mutilated and scarred, I worried if I would be physically attractive to a man after breast cancer surgery. It's not that I think men are shallow, it had more to do with all that cancer was taking away in my life, and I was not sure how much I would pay in the final cost of losses.
Worse yet, I wondered if simply being someone who had been diagnosed with cancer would make people run the other way. If the private conversations I have had with other women who have been diagnosed with breast cancer are a true indication, these are secret fears most of us share.
We each find our own inspiration back to feeling accepted and attractive in reclaiming the every day challenges and joys of relationships and life. For me, one of the ways I found that gave me hope was watching other breast cancer survivors enter new relationships or get married. As in -- obviously it doesn't seem to matter when it comes to love how imperfect you might be physically -- cancer surgery scars and all -- or that you were someone who had cancer.
I even find inspiration in Kylie Minogue being voted the number one desired traveling companion of men in a
poll conducted by British Airways. She beat out Rachel Stevens and actress Angelina Jolie for the top spot. Not bad.
Yes, I know, few of us have the attractive quality of fame, fortune and international celebrity status to carry us along, but that does not matter. The fact that Minogue was voted by men as the number one person they would most like to be seated next to on a flight just reaffirms one more time the hope factor for me.
Seriously, I am okay now, it's been a few years but I remember when this private fear hurt my heart and I wondered if cancer had stolen more from me than was obvious at the time of diagnosis. If you are newly-diagnosed and reading this, and worry and wonder privately what life will be like down the road, it only gets better and the fears and worry about sex appeal will be have been for naught. Few will run the other way.
Posted Jul 16th 2006 5:00AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Celebrity cancer diagnosis, Television, Celebrity news

From the moment the news broke that Kylie Minogue had been diagnosed with breast cancer, the world has followed her through treatment and into recovery. While she has been spotted recently at various events, she has never spoken at length about the last year that has transformed her life forever.
In a world exclusive interview with Sky One's Cat Deeley, that aired July 16, Kylie Minogue sat down and shared her experiences as a young woman diagnosed with breast cancer -- the effect it had on her and her family -- losing her hair -- coming to terms with being a breast cancer survivor and the fact that being a breast cancer survivor is still sinking in -- staying positive and believing you can get through it as her advice to other young women who have recently been diagnosed with breast cancer and are undergoing treatment.
Sky One has made available video segments of the interview with Minogue online
here.
"I just want to do everything. I honestly don't want to sound soppy or too clichéd, but that's the way it is. It's nice to take a walk and to see friends. I just can't help but see things differently," said Minogue of life as a breast cancer survivor. "I want to thank all the people who really might have thought that what they did was very small, but they all add up and even the smallest thing makes a difference in how you're feeling and your road to recovery.''
For a retrospective of Kylie Minogue's breast cancer journey:
Posted Jul 4th 2006 3:30PM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Celebrity cancer diagnosis, Daily news, Celebrity news

Australian singer
Kylie Minogue said in a recent interview that she and her family
fell to pieces upon hearing her diagnosis of breast cancer this past May. Since that time, she has had surgery and chemotherapy and she currently receives treatment to prevent a recurrence of the disease. And she is now picking up the pieces of her life and is rebounding from the once disbelief that her life would take a detour. Last week, she attended her first public appearance since her illness -- at Elton John's White Tie and Tiara ball -- and she is renaming her
Showgirl tour, which was canceled after her cancer battle began. Now the
Showgirl Homecoming Tour, Minogue is set to return to performing. Her concert promoter says she will take it slow -- to accommodate her off and on again fatigue -- but she will return with the vigor she is known for. Minogue says she feels like she has a new chance at life now. And she will talk all about it on July 16 when her interview is aired on Britain's Sky News.
Posted Jun 12th 2006 10:00PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Chemotherapy, Prevention, Celebrity cancer diagnosis, Celebrity news

Last May, when Kylie Minogue was diagnosed with an aggressive type of breast cancer, she was forced to cancel the remaining dates of her Showgirl world tour and an appearance at the Glastonbury Festival. Since that time, she has undergone surgery and chemotherapy. Using her celebrity status and personal experience, she has spoken out to raise awareness of breast cancer -- especially encouraging younger women to get tested for breast cancer. Minogue was 37 at the time of her breast cancer diagnosis.
For the first time since being diagnosed with breast cancer last year, Kylie
Minogue returned to the concert stage at London's G-A-Y club to join her sister Dannii where they sang
Jump To The Beat. After the set, Kylie presented Dannii with flowers. Dannii remained at her sister's side during the long battle to survive breast cancer, keeping up Kylie's spirits with love and humor.
Earlier this month, Kylie was honored with Glamour magazine's Woman of the Year award for her courageous battle with breast cancer. Minogue has proven, that even though moving from cancer diagnosis, through treatments and into recovery can seem like an ever-so-slow step-by-step uncertain process -- one day you do eventually find yourself back on life's stage singing your song.
Posted May 12th 2006 1:33PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Alternative Therapies, Prevention

Dannii Minogue told the British magazine Cosmopolitan that she is convinced
laughter cured her older sister Kylie's breast cancer. While the prognosis was always good, Dannii admits both sisters struggled to believe everything would be fine, so they dressed up in silly clothes and watched comedies to keep a positive attitude and spirits up.
Can laughter cure cancer? Not by itself -- but there are numerous studies that show laughter initiates a powerful biological process of feel-good healing chemicals that support and strengthen the immune system. We have done several posts
here,
here,
here,
here and
here about the healing power of humor and the laughter associated with it. So, even if it seems farfetched and unrealistic for Dannii to believe that laughter cured her sister of breast cancer, she might be more right than she is wrong.
Posted Apr 23rd 2006 12:44PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Alternative Therapies, Prevention

Singer
Dannii
Minogue, a longtime supporter of breast cancer research, and sister to
Kylie Minogue,
who was diagnosed with breast cancer last year, has released a song and music video called Under Pressure, about her
sister's battle with breast cancer.
The emotional impact of cancer can be overwhelming for the person
diagnosed with cancer. But it is equally devastating for the family and friends who are faced with news that threatens
to take the life of someone they dearly love. As a loved one of a cancer patient, you can feel helpless or lost in how
to help or how to make things better. Your secret wish is that you can do something magical to make the cancer go away.
You hold your breath and you pray -- alot. You wait at the ready for anything you can do and you worry that you may do,
or say, something wrong. Your heart breaks as you witness the difficult struggles your loved one with cancer is going
through in their fight against cancer. Your spirit trembles in fear that you may lose someone you cherish. Following is
a list of cancer organizations who offer support for cancer patients
and the people who love them.
If I have missed any organizations or
support groups that you feel have offered you and your family excellent support services, please leave the name of the
organization in the comment area.