April 20, 2001
In This Issue:
Agent Orange, Childhood Cancer Survivors, Stress and Breast Cancer, St. John's
Wort, Oral Contraceptives, Survivors' Policies, Cancer Fatigue, and Email
Discussion Groups
***********************************************
THE LATEST NEWS
Government Report Links Agent Orange To Fatal Childhood
Leukemia
Fertility Preservation Problematic For Childhood Cancer
Survivors
Stress Does Not Speed Breast Cancer Death
St. John's Wort Not So Great for Severe Depressions
Accutane Ineffective Against Lung Cancer
Oral Contraceptives Reduce Colorectal Cancer Risk
***********************************************
CANCER FATIGUE ON CANCERPAGE
Check out our new section on fatigue including tips for
managing fatigue.
http://cancerpage.matria.com/promos/April_Fatigue.asp
Also see the button for the Cancer Fatigue organization
and their Fatigue Inventory and Scale from the MD Anderson Cancer Center.
http://www.cancerfatigue.org/
***********************************************
POLICY UPDATES FROM SURVIVOR'S ORGANIZATION
The National Coalition of Cancer Survivorship (NCCS) will
send monthly e-mail updates on policy issues that affect people with cancer and
their families. Their Policy Department identifies topics and this month's
topics include: Tax Cut & Prescription Drug Benefit, Medical Privacy
Regulations Enacted, Stem Cell Research-Progress and Policy. For additional
information or to subscribe, send e-mail to policy@cansearch.org or visit NCCS
online at www.cansearch.org.
***********************************************
ASSOCIATION OF ONLINE CANCER RESOURCES (ACOR)
The ACOR.org cancer information system currently operates
99 electronic mailing lists focused on specific aspects of cancers, for example,
lymphedema, childhood survivors, and 4 for types of lung cancer. Also, for
example, other groups focus on faith, genetic ethics, and familial cancers.
People with rare cancers especially can find others on these daily emailed
discussion lists. Some groups use Spanish or other languages. The mailing lists
are designed to be public online support groups for the growing list of 61,000
subscribers, including patients, caregivers, and others looking for answers
about cancer and related disorders. Last week ACOR delivered 1,819,859
individual emails across the globe. http://www.acor.org/