Emily Yu, a longtime Beijing-based lingerie designer, has devoted some five years to developing bras and prostheses for women who have had a mastectomy - hoping her products will help them regain confidence.
A paper in the Journal of Breast Imaging indicates that breast cancer mortality rates have stopped declining in women older than age 74, and reconfirms that breast cancer mortality rates have stopped falling in women younger than age 40.
Breast cancer is the most common cancer diagnosed in women globally. But, in part thanks to screening programs, over 75% of those diagnosed with breast cancer in England now survive for 10 years or more.
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India Today on MSNBreast cancer deaths have stopped declining in the US: What does it mean?For US women overall breast cancer mortality rates have decreased steadily from 1990 to 2022, falling by 43.5% over that period. Ho
A revelation has given me perspective for the New Year, inspiring me to embrace change, set new goals and upgrade myself to a better version in 2025.
Health and Me on MSN4h
Lumpectomy Can Help Preserve Sexual Well-Being After Breast Cancer TreatmentA recent study highlighted that sexual well-being among lumpectomy patients actually improved within six months after surgery, whereas those who underwent mastectomy with reconstruction reported lower sexual well-being scores.
Chemotherapy patients reported a physical decline that extended more than two years after their diagnosis with breast cancer, researchers reported Feb. 28 in JAMA Network Open. This decline included fatigue and reduced ability to carry out daily activities like walking, climbing stairs or carrying groceries, researchers said.
With cancer rising in women under 40, there's concern about the causes — and the effects. PEOPLE's editor-in-chief Charlotte Triggs and Verywell Health's chief medical officer Dr. Sohaib Imtiaz take a look at what to know in the latest installment of People Like Us: Breast Cancer.
Researchers examined screening rates for three kinds of cancer before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic.
Several Dorchester and South Boston residents who are members of IBC New England were participants as the group made donations to two local hospitals to support efforts to research and enhance understanding of breast cancer.
A lumpectomy plus radiation is very effective for treating stage zero cancer, but new research suggests that active monitoring may be just as good.
Investigative Reporter Katie LaGrone shares the personal stories of five Florida women all diagnosed with breast cancer and all denied coverage for care by their insurance companies.
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