Reduce Your Breast Cancer Risk
“Overall healthy living may reduce
breast cancer risk”
The newest tips to keep you hale and hearty
According to the Susan G. Komen Foundation, every three minutes one woman will be diagnosed
with breast cancer. Yet when looking into the
disease’s cause, only 5 to 10% of breast cancers are due to heredity, which means there
is great hope for reducing your risk. The latest research points to promising prevention
strategies.
Sunshine and vitamin D may be key
Recent study results by Dr. Julia A. Knight of the Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute at
Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, Canada, suggest that exposure to sunlight and dietary sources
of vitamin D may be two of the best ways you
can reduce your breast cancer risk.
Combining the right food with sunshine exposure can produce sufficient vitamin D levels in
your body (1,000 IU per day). Here’s how:
- Getting about 10 to 15 minutes two times per week in the sun without sunscreen and with
exposed skin (face, arms, hands, or back) allows the sun’s rays to penetrate the skin
and synthesize vitamin D.
- Besides getting vitamin D from sunshine, you can also get it from specific
foods—including butter, eggs, and vitamin D–fortified foods, such as milk, soy milk,
orange juice, and cereals. Oily fish are
an animal source of vitamin D3, such as salmon
(wild caught is better for the environment),
trout, tuna (not every day due to
potential mercury levels), sardines, and mackerel.
- Vitamin D supplements might also help, though research has not yet shown that this is as
effective as sunlight and vitamin D gotten through food.
Live well and prosper
Overall healthy living may also reduce breast cancer risks.
- Get moving—Exercise in the sunshine and outdoors if possible. Many
magazines such as Self, Shape, and Yoga Journal offer exercise and
outdoor adventure ideas.
- Watch the waist—If you are overweight, look for low-calorie foods and
drinks.
- Kick the habit—Avoid second-hand smoke and use over-the-counter products to
help you quit smoking, such as nicotine gums, inhalers, lozenges, nasal sprays, or
patches.
Terra Wellington is a wellness lifestyle television personality,
writer, and actor. She takes walks in the sunshine everyday and loves the outdoors.
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Copyright © 2009 Truestar Health & Healthnotes, Inc. All rights reserved.
www.truestarhealth.com
The information presented in Truestar Healthnotes is for informational
purposes only. It is based on scientific studies (human, animal, or in vitro),
clinical experience, or traditional usage as cited in each article. The results reported may
not necessarily occur in all individuals. For many of the conditions discussed, treatment with
prescription or over-the-counter medication is also available. Consult your doctor,
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before making any changes in prescribed medications. Information expires September 2010.
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