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Cancer by the Numbers: A review

October 30, 2006 marked the launch of our series Cancer by the Numbers. Our intention was to give individual attention to each and every cancer, to raise awareness of the multitude of cancerous diseases that seem to consume our population, to answer questions and pose questions, and to initiate discussion among readers. I think we are accomplishing what we set out to do. Still, we have a lot of ground to cover. Since that October day last year, we have featured 13 different cancers. That's a lot. And not a lot, when you consider how many different strains of one disease really exist.

I am writing today to reaffirm our commitment to Cancer by the Numbers. These posts will appear at least twice per month -- so be on the lookout. Until the next one appears, though, take a look back at what we have to offer in one of our most comprehensive and researched Cancer Blog series. Here they are:

Cancer by the Numbers: Basal Cell Carcinoma
Cancer by the Numbers: Osteosarcoma
Cancer by the Numbers: Hodgkin's Disease
Cancer by the Numbers: Gallbladder Cancer
Cancer by the Numbers: Glioblastoma Multiforme
Cancer by the Numbers: Melanoma
Cancer by the Numbers: Mantle Cell Lymphoma
Cancer by the Numbers: Liver Cancer
Cancer by the Numbers: Rhabdomyosarcoma
Cancer by the Numbers: Cervical Cancer
Cancer by the Numbers: Pancreatic Cancer
Cancer by the Numbers: Lung Cancer
Cancer by the Numbers: Testicular Cancer

If there's a cancer you'd like to see covered sooner rather than later, please leave us a comment and let us know.

We meet again: More about Jacki Donaldson

It's been one year since I began writing for The Cancer Blog. According to statistics generated by this site, I've written 27,381 words and 793 posts. If you've been reading for this entire time, you surely know a lot about me. Not only do my posts reflect current news and issues, but they feature all sorts of personal stuff too. When considered together, my work here reflects just about every piece of my cancer journey, my inner most thoughts, my morals and values, my take on the world. But for those of you who haven't been reading for long, for those who have forgotten how I fit into the cancer puzzle, for those who want a recap, here's a rundown on me: Jacki Donaldson.

I was born and raised in Ohio but have also lived in Nevada, Virginia, and Florida -- my current home. My life always went pretty much according to plan -- I lived happily with my parents and one sister, faithfully attended school, went to college, got married, had two baby boys and a series of good jobs, and had just begun commenting to my family members about how lucky our family was not to have been affected by cancer. It seems just as I spoke this aloud, cancer arrived.

Continue reading We meet again: More about Jacki Donaldson

Readers: Here's how to learn more about post topics

Today, I've been asked twice to offer more specifics about the information contained in posts. I thought I'd communicate my thoughts on this matter publicly so you all may benefit.

First, let me share that blogging is like talking to a friend -- Hey, did you hear about that new study about the breast cancer vaccine?, I might say to my neighbor before I explain the overall gist of the news I happened upon. The purpose of blogging is to communicate a few details and to spark interest, not to capture every speck of information on the topic. Digging up the nitty gritty is for you, the reader.

Your quest for more knowledge takes just one click. Once you read a post, look to the bottom left and you will see a blue link titled Read. Click here and you'll land at the news source related to the post. If you don't find what you're looking for here, just type some key words into Google and search for more. If bloggers happen to find news but there is no internet link -- this happens with magazines and other print publications -- the source will be noted at the end of the post.

If a post contains personal perspective, like this one, you won't find a Read link -- that's because the source is in the blogger's head. You are welcome to leave a comment requesting more information about these posts.

Now this whole lesson on the Read link does not mean you cannot ask questions of bloggers -- please do -- but if you desire the quickest route to post details, this link is your best bet.

I hope this is clear. And I hope you find exactly what you seek in this world where cancer is one hot topic.

Cancer topics keep stacking up

Someone asked me the other day how I continue to come up with topics for my posts. I wish I could say it was a chore to find material on cancer, but it isn't. There is always something to write about -- so much to write about, in fact, that if I had the time and energy, I could write volumes each day.

I find my topics in newspapers, in magazines, and in books. I spot them on television, on the radio, on the internet. I draw from personal experience and from others' experiences. I write and write and write because cancer just keeps on appearing in my life. I wish it didn't.

Cancer is everywhere. And it offers me an endless reserve of material that just keeps stacking up. So how do I come up with topics for my posts? I don't. The topics come to me.

Cancer camaraderie -- up close and personal

She said she hopes we get to visit again sometime soon -- without feeling the need to talk solely about breast cancer. I have the same hope. Yet I am deeply satisfied with the conversation we shared about our similar cancer journeys -- mine two years old; hers brand new.

We had never before met -- or even spoken -- and knew each other only from an exchange of e-mails. It was this Cancer Blog that drew us together. She left a comment on one of my posts, I sent her a personal e-mail, and swiftly, our friendship blossomed.

I met my newest cancer friend this weekend -- face-to-face, up close and personal. It was lovely. We talked about chemotherapy -- she just completed her second treatment -- and wigs and radiation and about how our husbands and children cope with cancer. We talked for more than an hour, and then went our separate ways.

And now we are back to e-mail correspondence and our shared hope -- that we will one day meet again, to talk about more than just breast cancer.

Cancer by the Numbers: A breakdown of cancer, one by one

All cancers are not treated equally. Some attract a frenzy of attention -- breast cancer -- and some receive not much attention at all -- gallbladder cancer. Some are vigorously researched and studied. Others sit by idly, rarely the subject of investigation. Some are feverishly funded. Some never prosper by way of financial support. Yet they all share something very important in common. They are all cancer.

All cancers are marked by an uncontrollable division and spread of abnormal cells. And they are all capable of delivering shock and despair and even death to any one of us. And that makes each one -- brain cancer, cervical cancer, colon cancer, eye cancer, liver cancer, prostate cancer, stomach cancer, you name it -- worthy of equal attention.

And so I bring to you Cancer by the Numbers, a series of posts that will feature the basics about all sorts of cancer, beginning with the numbers -- the statistics -- to help define the prevalence of each cancer, followed by important facts about screening, diagnosis, treatment, survival, and more. I will cover the well-known cancers, the sort-of-known cancers, the barely-known cancers. And while I can only offer what I can track down on each form of cancer, I intend to dish out every piece of data I can dig up -- so we all can become a little more informed, a little more prepared should we have to personally do battle with any one of the 100 possible cancers out there.

The American Cancer Society reports that 1,399,790 new cancer cases will be diagnosed in 2006. This estimate does not include most carcinoma in situ (noninvasive cancer) cases and also does take into account the estimated one million cases of basal and squamous cell skin cancers that will be diagnosed this year. Of these predicted cases, about 564,830 will result in death -- that's more than 1,500 people each day. Cancer is the second most common cause of death in the United States, exceeded only by heart disease, and accounts for one of every four deaths.

These numbers are staggering. But without further explanation, they are broad and all-encompassing and don't say much about how all the individual diseases add up. That's what I plan to do -- break it all down, cancer by cancer, until the numbers make sense. And the cancers do too.

RetroReview: week that was at our health blogs

Welcome back from the weekend! Here is a review of what we were talking about during the second week in July in our other health blogs.

From The Cardio Blog:
From The Diabetes Blog:
To your good health! To a great week!

Cancer Fundraisers
 (0)
Cancer events (141)
Pink products (63)
Celebrities
Celebrity cancer diagnosis (73)
Celebrity fundraisers (83)
Celebrity in memoriam (75)
Celebrity news (173)
Celebrity spokesperson (46)
Features
Form and Function (7)
Today, I Am Grateful (10)
Worthy Wisdom (21)
RetroReview (6)
Saturday Six (4)
Sunday Seven (64)
Survivor Spotlight (40)
Cancer by the Numbers (17)
Recipe Healthy Living (52)
Healing Attitude Almanac (6)
Thought for the Day (148)
Media
Blogs (144)
Books (109)
Magazines (51)
Movies (21)
Products (154)
Services (116)
Sports (20)
Television (101)
Video games (4)
Meet the Bloggers
Bloggers (13)
Jacki Donaldson (2)
Kristina Collins (1)
Diane Rixon (1)
Nine DeJanvier (1)
Chris Sparling (1)
Allie Beatty (1)
Dalene Entenmann (1)
News
Daily news (684)
Events (85)
Fundraisers (169)
Opinion (170)
Politics (145)
Research (799)
Prevention
Cancer prevention foods (170)
Diets (213)
Environment (115)
Exercise (94)
Non-toxic alternatives (35)
Nutrition (131)
Obesity (52)
Smoking (101)
Stress Reduction (91)
Vitamins and nutrients (90)
Treatment
Alternative Therapies (411)
Cancer Caregivers (71)
Cancer Pre-vivors (21)
Cancer Survivors (469)
Chemotherapy (495)
Clinical Trials (160)
Drug (497)
Hospice (18)
Prevention (1327)
Radiation (77)
Stem Cell (25)
Surgery (40)
Types of Cancer
 (0)
All Cancers (820)
Anal cancer (2)
Animal (18)
Bladder Cancer (39)
Blood Cancer (18)
Bone Cancer (15)
Brain Cancer (106)
Breast Cancer (1324)
Cervical Cancer (72)
Childhood Cancers (204)
Colon and Rectal Cancer (235)
Endometrial Cancer (25)
Esophageal Cancer (35)
Eye Cancer (6)
Gallbladder Cancer (2)
Gastric cancer (5)
Germ Cell Tumors (1)
Head and Neck cancer (13)
Hodgkin's Lymphoma (55)
Kidney Cancer (56)
Leukemia (145)
Liver Cancer (50)
Lung Cancer (273)
Melanoma (105)
Mouth Cancer (42)
Multiple Myeloma (13)
Neuroblastoma (1)
Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma (56)
Oral Cancer (16)
Ovarian Cancer (154)
Pancreatic Cancer (78)
Pet Cancers (11)
Pregnancy and cancer (6)
Prostate Cancer (233)
Rectal Cancer (3)
Sarcoma (8)
Skin Cancer (153)
Stomach Cancer (28)
Teen Cancers (26)
Testicular Cancer (17)
Throat Cancer (20)
Thymic Cancer (0)
Thyroid Cancer (49)
Tissue Cancers (1)
Tongue Cancer (3)
Unknown Primary (2)
Uterine Cancer (9)
Womb Cancer (1)
Young Adult Cancers (104)

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