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Taipei, April 30 (CNA) One person gets cancer every five minutes and 48 seconds in Taiwan, and colon cancer is the most common type of cancer here for the fourth consecutive year, according to the Department of Health (DOH) Tuesday.
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Does an illness like heart disease or cancer run in your family?...Experts say the lifestyle choices you make every day can help keep you healthy. There's no doubt that some genes do lead inevitably to disease. "But for most people, a healthy
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Centralized record-keeping systems may help improve rates of colon cancer screening, according to a new study. Researchers at the Group Health Cooperative, a non-profit health care and insurance system in Washington state, used electronic health
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Net income for the fourth quarter of 2012 was $2 million, or 6 cents per share, compared to $ 2.5 million, or 8 cents per share, for the same period a year ago...Revenue for the quarter was a record $60.4 million, compared to $53.4 million for the
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That's what Consumer Reports has dubbed the new age of cancer screening where patients should be taking a good hard look at all those blood tests, X-rays, and ultrasounds before agreeing to be tested. The magazine released a report Wednesday rating
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People with colon cancer who spend more time walking and fewer hours on the couch are less likely to die over the seven to eight years after being diagnosed, a new study suggests. The findings don't prove exercise itself boosts a person's survival
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Colon cancer continues to be a leading cause of cancer deaths, as the number of newly diagnosed cases continue to grow concurrent with the rate of overweight, obesity and processed food consumption. This may come as no surprise to natural health
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Reuters Among people who have a genetic susceptibility to colon cancer, those whose diets are heavy in junk food have an even higher risk, according to a new study. "These patients have this very high risk because of this (genetic) mutation they have,
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Traci Leopold's father was 53 when he died of colon cancer in 1994. He and his younger brother learned they had the disease within two weeks of each other. Leopold's grandmother had colon and uterine cancer, but it wasn't something the family
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MyHealthNewsDaily For some people, one colonoscopy at age 50 may be enough for their whole lives, a new study suggests. In the study, patients that had no signs of cancer on their first colonoscopy lived just as long regardless of whether they
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