This blog post…. includes some of the highlights of this past year when considering options for the prevention of cancer and treatments. While it’s best to think prevention and early detection, one of the first items garnering my attention when I decided to research this topic. Almost seven year ago present would have to be diversity of the states incident and mortality rates for cancer per 100,000 people. Then while looking further into it…. it’s NOT quality of health care that determines life.
Rather it’s quality of lifestyle: while out in the Western States where people are more outdoorsy. Maintaining vitamin D levels through sun exposure and NOT smoking as much could be the determining factors regardless of health care facilities. The lifestyle choices of clean living and active lifestyle determines if you get cancer and when you die from it. In my opinion entirely …. I also think the more active one is…. the more apt they will be health minded.
In Utah… alone which has the least incident and mortality rates in the United States. Even though Utah doesn’t have a Medical Institution that is in U.S. News & World Reports Top 50 Cancer Hospitals. Statistics does show their rate of mortality from cancer is lowest in the country. Within this website which is a centralized hub of cancer research providing cancer quick facts. Additionally what you can find… is a comprehensive cancer library and some of my favorite websites on the internet.
My Top Ten Websites:
PreventCancer.org CancerCompass.com
CancerIndex.org CancerQuest.org
Chemocare.com DoctorYourself.com
Self-HelpCancer.org EmbodiWorks.org
CancerDietitian.com LifeScipt.com
So as you scroll down “blog roll” and when one blog leads you to another. Where each blog post is written in short story form in which the visitant should use as a self directive guide for a search for an answer to cancer. My intent is how do you find a website “if” you don’t know it’s on the world wide. I found most of the websites from countless trips to Half Price Books or Hastings Stores. While checking out the references in the back of books.