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Deborah Whittingham says that due to the stigma surrounding testosterone and it being viewed as a ‘male hormone’, she felt ...
(Or my story is.) Here’s what happened after the oncologist told me I had testicular cancer: Over eight months, I had two surgeries and 16 administrations of a powerful chemotherapy “cocktail.” ...
My body tells a very different story. I feel cancer’s presence daily in my numb scars with their reddish squiggles from radiation snaking across my flat chest wall. I can see it in my protruding ...
Learning I carried the BRCA1 mutation was terrifying, but it gave me the power to choose prevention, embrace survivorship, ...
The effects of chemo and radiation can take months or years to surface. As a survivor, I have the scars to prove it.
My two sons carry a family medical history that makes prostate cancer a very real concern. Their biological father was ...
"I’ve had guys show up at my door and get naked, then, after foreplay, examine my penis like I was having a medical exam." ...
I inherited a cancer gene from my dad. He also left me hope for survival. The treatment, surgeries and recovery were grueling. I admit that thoughts of giving up crossed my mind.
"Science saved my life, and I want to use it to help others," writes Claire Brown about proposed federal funding cuts.
Chris Evert reveals she is cancer free: "I'm sharing my story because my journey isn't over" One year after disclosing the diagnosis, the Hall of Famer recounts her successful battle with the disease.