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Page 3 - மார்பக புற்றுநோய் கூட்டணி News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Delaware Breast Cancer Coalition celebrates 30 years of service

June 12, 2021 The Delaware Breast Cancer Coalition is celebrating 30 year of connecting and supporting breast cancer survivors and their families in communities across the state. The coalition began in 1991 as a small group of community volunteers led by Maureen Lauterbach, who was committed to decreasing the mortality rate of breast cancer in Delaware. In 1997, it became a 501c (3) nonprofit organization to serve and empower the community by raising awareness of breast health issues through community outreach and education in order to facilitate the early detection and treatment of breast cancer. The coalition’s vision is to create a community where every person diagnosed with breast cancer is a survivor, and fear and doubt are replaced with knowledge and hope.

Consumer Alert: Customer disservice How one man s incredible story has a lesson for us all

Maureen McGuire, Rochester NY journalist, to retire from WROC-TV

Maureen McGuire, Rochester NY journalist, to retire from WROC-TV © Provided Maureen McGuire, journalist for WROC-TV, Rochester s CBS affiliate. Veteran broadcast journalist Maureen McGuire announced this week that she will retire later this year. McGuire, a longtime reporter at  Rochester s CBS affiliate WROC-TV (Channel 8), anchors the evening and late night news. According to a news release from the news station, McGuire will retire in August, A Rochester native, McGuire attended Bishop Kearney High School, Manhattanville College in Purchase, Westchester County, then pursued a graduate degree in journalism at the University of Missouri-Columbia. She worked as a broadcast journalist in Missouri and Michigan before returning to Rochester in 1997.

Deanna s Discoveries: When should breast cancer screenings start?

WHECTV Created: May 04, 2021 05:50 PM ROCHESTER, N.Y. (WHEC)  As things slowly return to normal after a full year of pandemic panic, women are finally making preventative screenings a priority and scheduling their annual mammograms. But for one group of women, the question of whether they should be screened looms large. That group is women between the ages of 40 and 49. The recommendations are all over the map. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention has posted the screening guidelines from seven different organizations and they vary widely. For example, the American College of Radiology says women should start annual screenings at age 40. The American Cancer Society says at age 45, but women should be given the choice to start screening earlier, but the American College of Physicians says the potential harm outweighs the benefits for women 40 to 49. The group points to the fact that only one in 68 women in that age group is diagnosed with breast ca

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