Here in the United States we are in a high speed world. And when it comes to health problems we want a solution fast. Part of that is making sure we get the BEST solution that’s ...
One day in April, 1996 a doctor, out of the blue, told me I had leukemia. "What happens now and how does it affect my future?" I thought, which most people who are diagnosed would ask.
What happens when the survival and fatality rates for a disease are reversed? That’s what’s happened with Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia (CML), a rare slow-growing bone marrow and blood ...
More people than ever before are surviving cancer, but it's coming at a price - one expected to grow to $158 billion a year in the U.S. by the next decade.
If she had faced cancer in her home country, Wossene Bowler knows she would not be alive today. For most people there, a cancer diagnosis is essentially a death sentence.
The top information sources for patients with a serious illness today are clear – their medical team and the Internet. The most active online are those living with chronic disease.
Patients with a rare form of cancer are changing the language of cancer, both in the way treatment is approached and the way patients connect with each other.