• About Route 53

Route 53 – Enjoying Life's Joy Ride

~ A road down one man's life without any speed limits or simply A Blog About Nothing

Route 53 – Enjoying Life's Joy Ride

Tag Archives: goaltender

35 Months Later – Living with Cancer

01 Friday Jul 2011

Posted by route53 in Route 53 - Life is A Highway

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

breast cancer, goaltender, research, surgery

Breast Cancer Logo

Raise breast sawareness

35 months ago my wife was diagnosed with breast cancer. It seemes so long ago but time really flew The care we received from the UCSF Breast Cancer Clinic was unparallelled. This week I came across an article covering the head of the clinic and thought I’d share it with all of you:

by Julian Guthrie for the San Francisco Chronicle:
Surgeon Laura Esserman, head of breast cancer research and treatment at UCSF, has favorite songs she sings to patients as they’re about to go under a general anesthetic. There’s “Don’t You Worry ‘Bout a Thing,” and her all-time favorite, “For Good.”

One of her greatest areas of impact may come through a statewide research project called Athena, which she has spearheaded and will involve the early screening and follow-up for breast cancer of 150,000 women statewide at five UC cancer centers. The University of California initiative has just begun to enroll patients at UCSF.

Q: What are you excited about right now in the cancer field?

A: We started enrolling patients at two of our five centers, with others starting to enroll in July. We have also started doing a comprehensive risk assessment for every woman who comes in for screenings. We are looking at prevention as part of primary care. We are at the beginning of the road in making breast cancer prevention like heart disease prevention. We want to build a new model.

Q: What is the latest recommendation in terms of mammography?

A: If you are under 50, you need to sit down with your provider and ask for your level of risk. What is my breast density? Should I get screened or not screened? If your risk is high, yes, get screened. But again, I think screening has the most significant benefit for women between the ages of 50 and 70.

Q: What are the most important lifestyle changes people can make for breast cancer prevention?

A: If you are postmenopausal and you are overweight, you will have higher levels of estrogen. Through diet and exercise, you can bring that down, which is good for everything, including a sense of well-being. We try to get women to stick to no more than three to four glasses of wine a week, as alcohol is an associated risk factor for breast cancer.

Q: Have you developed a thick skin in delivering the news to women and men that they have breast cancer?

A: I don’t have a thick skin. You can’t. The good news is that there are some people for whom cancer is not that significant, where you can really reassure the person. Of course, it’s very hard if you know someone is in a really bad situation. I face it with them. You can’t just sit back and say this is an academic exercise. This is something that affects their lives – that determines whether their children will grow up and know them.

Q: Where did you grow up, and what did you want to be?

A: I was born in Chicago, and when I was 9 my family moved to Miami. I always wanted either to be a cancer researcher or cancer doctor.

Q: What was your awakening to cancer?

A: Hmm. I read a biography of Madame Curie. I thought what she did was cool.

Q: Where do you live in the city and where are your favorite hangouts?

A: Ashbury Heights. I love to work my way through the Top 100 restaurant list. My son and I were working our way through the cheap eats list.

Q: Secret talents?

A: I love to barbecue anything.

Q: How does working in the midst of cancer, when life becomes more precious, affect you?

A: You never know what’s in store for you. You have to live life to the fullest. I have a great sense of urgency. We need more answers and solutions.

Q: If you weren’t working as a pioneer in the breast cancer field, what would you be doing?

A: Trying to improve the education system. When I cure cancer, I’ll start working on that.

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/06/22/DDS81JRVIS.DTL#ixzz1QpkKfK4H

Categories

  • Breast Cancer – A Loving Fight (164)
  • Business – Affiliate Marketing (17)
  • Photos with Herbie (1)
  • Route 53 – Celebrity Sightings (17)
  • Route 53 – Life is A Highway (186)
  • San Francisco – Leaving your heart (14)
  • San Francisco – Sports & Life (17)
  • Travels: The Route 53 (16)

Pages

  • About Route 53

Route53 Tweets

Tweets by Route53

Affiliate Marketing

  • Affiliate Karma
  • Affiliate Marketers Give Back
  • Affiliate Summit
  • Socialnomics

Cancer Resource Links

  • A Guide For Clueless Guys
  • A Supremely Kind Spouse
  • Alltop Breast Cancer
  • Breast Cancer for Husbands
  • Breast Cancer Husband
  • Breastcancer.org
  • Carol Franc Buck Breast Care Center
  • FightPink.org
  • Love Her Tender
  • Men Against Breast Cancer
  • My Wife With Cancer
  • Price of Love
  • The Moutray Chronicles
  • The Widow Lady

Personal Links

  • Jeremy Affeldt's Where is the Love
  • Love Bug Fans
  • My Personal Facebook Page
  • My Personal LinkedIn Profile
  • My Twitter
  • Route 53 on Video
  • San Francisco Giants
  • WordPress.com
  • WordPress.org

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 21 other subscribers

Blog Stats

  • 46,410 hits

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Route 53 - Enjoying Life's Joy Ride
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Route 53 - Enjoying Life's Joy Ride
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar