Author and wellness advocate Liana Werner-Gray talked about her life-threatening cancer diagnosis and the unconventional treatment path that inspired her to write her book "The Earth Diet."
Some oncologists suggest that, for certain early cancers not at risk of spreading, the term “cancer” should be avoided.
Who is Amanda Riley? Where is she now? What is the true story of her faking cancer? Read on for an update about Amanda including her husband Cory filing for divorce.
The decline in cancer incidence among men and increase among women has narrowed the male‐to-female cancer incidence rate ratio from a peak of 1.6 in 1992 to 1.1 in 2021. In people aged 50-64 years, cancer incidence is statistically equivalent between women and men, at 832.5 and 830.6 cases per 100,000 people, respectively.
WASHINGTON — President Trump unveiled a $500 billion artificial intelligence infrastructure project Tuesday at the White House alongside reps from three tech and investment giants — with those business leaders asserting the initiative could cure cancer.
The ACS has released cancer statistics for 2025 suggesting that more than 2 million new cases of cancer will be diagnosed in the US this year.
Triple negative breast cancer wreaks a particularly heavy toll in certain regions and populations, with stark differences in both incidence and survival rates
The Mississippi state and US federal governments are failing to take steps to prevent cervical cancer deaths for Black women in the Mississippi Delta, the Southern Rural Black Women’s Initiative for Economic and Social Justice (SRBWI) and Human Rights Watch said in a report released today during cervical cancer awareness month.
PFAS, also known as "forever chemicals" are found in manufacturing and consumer products and contaminate nearly half of U.S. water supplies. A novel study has linked PFAS-contaminated water with increased incidence of cancer.
Researchers at the Keck School of Medicine of USC discovered a link between levels of manmade "forever chemicals" in drinking water and an increased risk of certain cancers, including those affecting the digestive system,
The former New Jersey senator was convicted of 16 federal crimes in July related to a long-running corruption scheme
Statistically, your risk for cancer goes up from the very first sip of alcohol. However, what’s lost in this messaging is how much this risk is.