InSurviving Cancer, Kay Quain shares invaluable lessons, including self-help techniques, learning during three years of treatments for cancer. How to tell family and friends; how to handle their reactions. Understanding chemotherapy, its effects and side effects. How to go about surviving financially. From personal experience, Kay Quain shares answers to these and many other pertinent concerns of cancer patients and their families and friends.
Surviving Cancer offers a practical, integrated way of self-healing, with advice on: •Creating the best possible team of physicians and loved ones • Maximizing nutrition, using veggie overdosing • Ridding your cells of harbored anger ...
When cancer specialists at Boston’s internationally renowned Dana-Farber Cancer Institute diagnosed Margie Levine with a deadly asbestos-related lung cancer, they predicted that she had only six months to live. Refusing...
This is a book for those who are in the midst of receiving conventional cancer treatment, who are looking for other options because that treatment has done all that it can, or who seemingly have no options left but still feel that the ...
In this unique book, answers to practical questions, including how and where to find financial and emotional support as a caregiver, are explored through research and personal experience.
At the end of our conversation, Dr. Taffel told me about a client—we'll call her Karen—who had come to Pathways the year before with an aggressive form of colon cancer that had metastasized to her liver, prompting her oncologist to give ...
[10] Mazur A, Maier JA, Rock E, Gueux E, Nowacki W, Rayssiguier Y. Magnesium and the inflammatory response: Potential ... 20| Gurer H, Ozgunes H, Oztezcan S, Ercal N. Antioxidant role of alpha-lipoic acid in lead toxicity.
In todays world, it is likely you have experienced cancer through your family, your friends, or your own personal encounter. Throughout this book, the veil is lifted and cancer shows its many different faces.
A diagnosis of cancer, life-changing for both patients and their loved ones, presents many questions: How will the disease and treatments affect you?
This book addresses in lively detail these issues, illustrating each with stories of survivors and current studies about survivorship.
No one else in my family had faced the reality of this incredible life-altering event. No one in my friend circle had heard these words, either. I was alone in many ways. This book is a collection of my thoughts and experiences.