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Newsletters

Please enjoy our most recent newsletters, as well as an archive dating back to Spring 1999. If you'd like to receive our newsletters in your email, please sign up here.

January 2018 Newsletter

 

From the Director's Desk - A wish for 2018 "Be Life*"

Dear Reader,

It is my great privilege to THANK YOU, along with all the ZBC supporters, for your 2017 year-end appeal donation, your generous hours of volunteering during 2017, your fundraising for the Dipsea Hike for Zero Breast Cancer and your partnership in sharing information about modifiable breast cancer risk. 

Your generosity, in combination with a range of communal and business partners, make an impact. I am delighted to also say THANK YOU to the Marin County Board of Supervisors, various local police departments, firefighters and business such as Peter Levy Plumbing, Safeway, Allstate, Hand & Hand, Wareham Development, Cavallo Point and Lappert's Ice Cream who sustain the vision of a world with zero breast cancer. My job would not be done without another acknowledgment for the generosity of the Dipsea Hike sponsors and in-kind donors. THANK YOU. For a full listing of Dipea Hike 2017 sponsors click here!

Last Thursday Catherine Thomsen and I attended the Annual Meeting of the San Francisco Women's Cancer Network.  (SFWCN). This gathering is always an excellent opportunity to connect with our San Francisco based colleges from UCSF, the Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and numerous community based non-profits working to ensure that safety-net services for cancer patients remain well supported.  It was good to catch up with former ZBC board member, Fern Orenstein, and former ZBC ED, Janice Barlow.  A highlight of the meeting was a challenging and thought provoking presentation by Dr. Kim F. Rhoads, MD, MS, MPH, FACS. Dr. Rhoads presented compelling evidence of systemic factors that overtly and covertly perpetuate disparities in health and healthcare accross racial lines. Talking about health and wellness with its focus on individual behaviors is necessary but not sufficient to improve the health outcomes of undeserved and disadvantaged population groups.. We took this message to heart as a reminder of the importance of diverse community involvement in breast cancer survivorship care and recurrence prevention planning - a key focus of several Zero Breast Cancer initiatives and partnerships.  Dr. Rhoads reminded us of an important quote from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. “Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane.”  And added her own twist with the modification of the word "inhumane' to "inhuman"! 

Fern Orenstein updated the SFWCN participants on changes in the funding landscape in 2019 and beyond as the Avon Breast Cancer Crusade support for many local programs will no longer be available.  Fern gave full credit to the huge impact the Avon Breast Cancer Crusade has made in the Bay Area and we join her in acknowledging how crucial their support was to Zero Breast Cancer over a very long period. I am glad to report that Zero Breast Cancer has already made great strides in securing alternative sources of funding over the past 18 months and the coming changes will not deter us from our mission.

On a somber note we were recently advised of the passing of Marjorie (Marjie) Bonner shortly before the 2017 Dipsea Hike for Zero Breast Cancer.  As my history with Zero Breast Cancer is relatively short it took some digging to find out how Marjie was connected to ZBC and why the work of ZBC was important enough to her to include us in her estate planning.  We were greatly moved to learn that Marjie was the mother who survived the loss of her daughter Andrea (Annie) Fox to breast cancer when Annie was only 35 years old. You can read more about Annie on page 9 of the Marin Breast Cancer Watch Fall 2002 Newsletter  We would like to take this opportunity to express our deepest condolences to Marjie's family, friends and community as will as to Annie's friends and community who knew Marjie.  

We would also like to take this opportunity to wish Rabbi Stacey Laveson Friedman of Congregation Rodef Sholom here in San Rafael well. Rabbi Stacey recently shared with her congregation and community that she is undergoing treatment for breast cancer.  Many of our Zero Breast Cancer readers, dedicated volunteers, Dipsea Hike participants and donors are members of Congregation Rodef Sholom.

I will conclude by explaining the asterisk * in the heading of this piece.  In the Hebrew language letters (and words) have numerical values.  Reverse engineering 2018 gives us the words 'Be Life".  Our wish to you for 2018 and beyond is "Be Life'.

Yours in health, 

Rose Barlow 

Executive Director

PS Please don't forget its not too early to show your support in 2018!  We count on donors like you.  Thank you.

 

 ROOTED IN MARIN AND BRANCHING OUT INTO THE EAST BAY!

We are delighted to announce a new partnership with WCRC!

After almost a year of collaboration under a PCORI (Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute) grant and other mutually supportive initiatives, Zero Breast Cancer and Women's Cancer Resource Center have entered into two agreements; a Mutual Services Agreement and a Mutual Space Sharing Agreement. Starting next month ZBC Program Director, Catherine Thomsen, will have an office at WCRC's new home at 2908 Ellsworth St, Berkeley, CA 94705.  Her email address (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.) and her phone number (415.507.1949 x 102) remain unchanged.

Zero Breast Cancer's headquarters remain at our existing location of 30 N. San Pedro Road, San Rafael, CA 94903.  

 PLEASE NOTE OUR SUITE NUMBER IS NOW #140

 

ZBC ADVOCATES THE PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE

KEEP CELL PHONES OUT OF BRAS!

 

Click the image to watch the video

December 14, 2017

The California Department of Public Health (CDPH) just issued long-awaited recommendations to reduce microwave radiation exposures from cell phones, especially for children. Spurred by a lawsuit and research suggesting that “long-term, high use may impact human health,” the CDPHpress release includes guidance on why and how to reduce cell phone radiation. The CDPH drafted more than 27 versions of this advice since 2008, but December 13, 2017 was the first time CDPH published it online. The CDPH original 2008 guidance referred to the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute  Cell Phone Advice and also included recommendations for state employees to reduce exposures to microwave radiation from cell phones as well as home and office cordless phones. The newly released guidance focuses only on cell phones cautioning that “children may be more at risk”  because they will be exposed to cell phone radiation for a “lifetime”  and with radiation exposures deeper into their brain.  

“Children’s brains develop through the teenage years and may be more affected by cell phone use,” said CDPH Director and State Public Health Officer Dr. Karen Smith. The new three-page CDPH guidance includes practical steps to reduce exposure to cell phone radiation, including keeping the phone away from the body, reducing cell phone use when the signal is weak, reducing the use of cell phones to stream videos and not sleeping with your cell phone. The guidance also states:

“Laboratory experiments and human health studies have suggested the possibility that long-term, high use of cell phones may be linked to certain types of cancer and other health effects, including: brain cancer and tumors of the acoustic nerve and salivary glands, lowered  sperm quality and inactive or less mobile sperm, headaches and effects on learning and memory, hearing, behavior and sleep.”

The new CDPH guidance includes practical steps both adults and children could take to reduce exposure to radio frequency energy from cell phones.  
 
·       Keeping the phone away from the body
·       Reducing cell phone use when the signal is weak
·       Reducing the use of cell phones to stream audio or video, or to download or upload large files
·       Keeping the phone away from the bed at night
·       Removing headsets when not on a call
·       Avoiding products that claim to block radio frequency energy. These products may actually increase your exposure.
 
Click here to see the December 2017 CDPH Cell Phone Advice

 

NEW: Book Review # 13

 

 

John Link, M.D., a breast oncologist and founder of Breastlink, a multispecialty breast cancer diagnostic and treatment medical group, has updated the The Breast Cancer Survival Manual in its sixth edition. This edition expands on the breast cancer fundamentals included in previous editions by highlighting new and exciting advances in diagnostic tests, genomic tests and targeted therapies. Throughout the book, Dr. Link skillfully explains complex medical and scientific concepts in a way that is clear and easy to understand. The text includes helpful diagrams, treatment flow charts and practical tools to reinforce topics. The author combines his professional insights with the most recent scientific research in this comprehensive and accessible guide for the management of breast cancer.  You can read the full report here  

 

JANUARY TEEN ENERGY!

 

 

Thank you to volunteers Lindsey and Rachel for giving up a Sunday afternoon to help with some projects during our recent move.  One of the assignments helped ZBC prepare for a presentation to a Girl Scout group in Mill Valley a couple of weeks later.  Teens paying it forward in a very real way! 

 

 

If you would like a member of ZBC staff to meet in person with teen groups in the Bay Area please email us here

 

ZBC promotes breast cancer risk-reduction through translation of scientific

research and evidence-based recommendations that support

health and wellness at key stages of life.

 

We envision a world with zero breast cancer!

 

 
  1. December 2017 Newsletter
  2. November 2017 Newsletter
  3. October 2017 Newsletter
  4. September 2017 Newsletter

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