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Extra Weight Increases Cancer Risk


Next time you take another bite when you aren't actually hungry,
you might want to think about what else you might be opting for,
besides an extra scrumptious morsel -perhaps it could be cancer.

One of the most important steps you can take to lower your risk
of cancer is to maintain a healthy weight. Most of us have been
hearing about genetic and environmental pollutants for so long
that we think cancer is beyond our control, but in fact, more
than 50 percent of all cancers can be prevented with a healthy
lifestyle. While most people are aware that a healthy weight can
reduce the risk of heart disease, stroke, diabetes,
osteoarthritis, gall bladder disease, and sleep apnea, few
realize that it can also lower the risk of some of the most
common types of cancer, including breast, colon, and endometrial
cancer.

Are You a Healthy Weight? A healthy weight is defined by a body
mass index (BMI) of 25 or lower. Higher than 30 is the medical
definition of obesity, which usually marks the threshold
researchers define as associated with increased risks. To find
out yours, go to www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa/bmi/calc-bmi.htm

Breast Cancer According to the Harvard Nurse's Health Study,
women may be able to lower their risk of breast cancer by
keeping their weight steady. Compared to women who gained less
than five pounds during adulthood, those who gained more than 45
pounds had 40 percent higher risk of developing breast cancer
after menopause. The more weight a woman puts on after
menopause, the more estrogen her body produces- and the higher
her risk of breast cancer. Overweight women are often diagnosed
with breast cancer at a later stage, when it is more difficult
to treat.

Colon Cancer Colon Cancer is one of the most common types of
cancer, but it is also one of the most preventable. Among the
many ways that men and women can lower their risk of this
disease is to maintain a healthy weight. Data shows that obese
people are 50 percent more likely than lean adults to develop
non-cancerous growths in the colon that have the potential
become cancerous.

So instead of opting for maybe a possible malignancy with those
extra helpings, help yourself to a mindfulness of determining
whether or not really are hungry, and congratulate yourself for
making a healthy choice.

(Some excerpts printed with permission from The Nurses Health
Study Annual Newsletter /November 2003, vol. 10)

Link: Assess your own cancer risk: www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa



About the author:
Cecelia Poole is a registered nurse with years of experience in
private practices, clinics, rural, and academic hospitals. She
is a member of Sigma Theta Tau the International Honor Society
of Nurses.
 

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