Saturday, August 06, 2005

Kylie Effect leads to more cancer screenings

An interesting story on how Kylie Minogue's fight with breast cancer has piqued the willingness of women to get themselves screened for any possiblity of breast cancer.

Australian pop star Kylie Minogue was diagnosed with breast cancer in May, and quickly had a breast cancer surgery to remove the breast cancer lump.

Now a study in Australia has revealed that coverage of the singer's fight against breast cancer has caused an unprecedented increase in bookings for breast screening by women of different age groups and it is being touted as the Kylie Effect, which could help reduce deaths from breast cancer as more women get screened for the disease.

HRT lowers Breast Cancer Risk

This news report talks about a new study that sounds a note of calm in the sea of concern that has surrounded recent findings on the potential risks of hormone replacement therapy for postmenopausal women.

According to this research, a woman's risk of developing breast cancer while taking combined hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is actually fairly low.

The researchers, based at the New South Wales Breast Cancer Institute in Australia, estimated the individual breast cancer risk of women up to 79 years of age, something known as cumulative absolute risk.

The cumulative absolute risk of breast cancer declined as a woman aged, as long as she was not taking combined HRT, meaning estrogen and progestin.

For women aged 40 to 79 who are not using HRT, the average risk of breast cancer is 7.2 percent (one in 14); at 50 years of age, it is 6.1 percent (one in 16); and at 60 years, it is 4.4 percent (one in 23).

Site Supported by:
Erotic Lingerie,