Attention! Information is for reference only!
Before taking the course, consult a doctor!
WEB SITE ONLY DIRECTORY. NOT PHARMACY! We do not sell medicines! None!

Cancer


Judith Martindale, a financial planner from St. Louis Obispo, California, was 41 when she learned that she had cancer. "Life burned me twice with fire: my husband came to me and told me that he loves another woman, and the doctor told me that I have cancer."
There is hardly another disease that causes such horror as cancer, a progressively developing disease that initially develops without symptoms, characterized by abnormal cell growth, which kills 242,000 women (and 272,000 men) every year. This is 700 women every day, and one death from cancer every 2 minutes.
"Although heart disease is the leading cause of death among Americans, most people are more afraid of cancer," says Barry Cassillet, PhD, professor of medicine at the University of Durham and the University of North Carolina. In fact, any disease that carries a mortal danger horrifies us. But the horror associated with cancer is so deeply ingrained in our minds that it persists despite the fact that over the past 30 years, the survival rate of cancer has improved. "
"Cancer is no longer an automatic death sentence," Jean A. Petrek, MD, surgeon from the Sloan-Kettering Memorial Cancer Center in New York, and author of a book for women on the prevention, detection and treatment of cancer, echoed to her. New advances in the treatment of cancer, including surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy or experimental therapy, led to the fact that almost half of all cases survive 5 years after the start of treatment. "
"Despite all these successes, the realization that you have cancer leads to a serious emotional breakdown," says Jimmy Holland, MD, head of the psychiatric service at the Sloan-Kettering Memorial Cancer Center. But, when you have already accepted the treatment plan, you have hope. You think: "I can do this, this and this, and the doctor says that I do not face the danger of dying immediately, as I imagined."
Most people, when starting treatment, are already able to control themselves, adds Dr. Holland. And it does not matter how difficult the treatment is, most importantly, they do something, and this allows them to hope and be optimistic. "





Infectious diseases for all
Women Health
Infectious diseases
Tuberculosis
Surgical diseases
Obstetrics
Gynecology
Eye diseases
Diseases of the ear, throat, nose
Stomatology
Skin diseases
Venereal diseases
Nervous diseases
Mental illnesses
Childhood diseases
First aid
Surgical diseases
Acute poisoning
Medicinal products
Lab tests
Modern research methods
Nursing
Physiotherapeutic procedures
Dietary food
Spa treatment
Internal illnesses