Irish cancer experts decry breast cancer study findings
Irish cancer experts have urged caution about a British study that appears to show that breast cancer screening programmes have yet to show a reduction in the number of women who die from the disease....
View ArticleBreast self-examination a waste of time, says cancer registry chief
Regular breast self-examination is a “waste of time” in the early detection of breast cancer, while there is “very little evidence” that annual prostate-specific antigen (PSA) tests have any impact on...
View ArticleIrish breast cancer research centre to be first of its kind in world
Women diagnosed with breast cancer are to be asked to contribute tumour tissue to a national biobank which will be used to monitor treatments for the disease. Breast Predict, the first nationwide...
View ArticleSeamus Clarke on care for breast cancer patients
What the National Cancer Control Programme/HSE have failed to inform the women who hold medical cards is that this preventative care is not covered by the medical card scheme and that they maybe...
View ArticleSurgeon would have ordered mammogram for patient in 2007 if he had the resources
A breast cancer surgeon facing six allegations of professional misconduct told a Medical Council fitness-to-practise inquiry if he’d had the resources he had today he would have referred a 40-year-old...
View ArticleSéamus O’Reilly: Recurrent breast cancer patients ‘need liaison nurse’
Dr Séamus O’Reilly, a consultant oncologist at Cork University Hospital (CUH), said women with metastatic (or recurrent) breast cancer, where the disease has spread from the breast to other parts of...
View ArticleBreast cancer surgeon cleared of professional misconduct
A breast cancer surgeon whose 40-year-old patient had her diagnosis delayed by 10 months has been cleared of professional misconduct at a Medical Council fitness-to-practise inquiry today. The doctor,...
View ArticleBreast cancer risk cut by daily hour-long walk, study finds
Women who walk for an hour a day can cut their chance of breast cancer by 14 per cent, a study has found. While it is well known that being active cuts risk of the disease, this is the first study to...
View ArticleBreast cancer death rate falls by 19% in past decade
Health Minister, Dr James Reilly, welcomed the Department of Health’s document, Health in Ireland: Key Trends 2013, which chronicles the changing nature of Irish health over the past decade. “Overall,...
View ArticleMore Irish women are winning breast cancer fight as death rate drops by a third
It marks a major turnaround since the 1980s, as Prof Phillipe Autier of the Internal Prevention Research Unit at Lyon, France said the largest fall has been in those countries which once had the...
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