2014

Cancer Council calls for joint action to promote smoke free pregnancie

Cancer Council has raised concern over new figures showing 35 per cent of teenage mothers and 15 per cent of all mothers in Queensland smoke at some point during their pregnancy. The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare issued Australia’s Mothers and Babies 2012 report yesterday, revealing 12.5 per cent of women nationally smoked while…

Feast to feel good this festive season

Cancer Council Queensland is helping Queenslanders stay healthy in the lead up to the festive season by feasting to feel good, rather than full or fatigued. The Health of Queenslanders Report 2014* branded Queensland as the heaviest state in Australia – an undesirable claim to fame – but an issue that could be improved through…

One in two Queensland kids suffer sunburn annually

New figures show more than half of all Queensland kids will suffer from sunburn this year, prompting the Cancer Council to call for parents to get serious about sun protection. The latest statistics* show 54 per cent of Queensland children aged 5 to 17 are sunburnt annually – about five per cent receive a sunburn…

Slip, Slop, Slap app has you covered

Slip, Slop, Slap with the help of an app this summer – smartphones may very well be the newest weapon in the fight against skin cancer, following the 2014 launch of an improved Cancer Council SunSmart app. Cancer Council’s updated SunSmart app has already been downloaded more than 140,000 times this month, and as well…

Couples struggle to cope with prostate cancer

Cancer Council is calling on partners of men with prostate cancer to reach out for support, with research showing partners experience high levels of distress related to the diagnosis of their loved one. Around 36 per cent of female partners of men diagnosed with prostate cancer experience mild to severe anxiety, with the man’s psychological…

Cancer an environmental disease: World Cancer Atlas

Cancer is an environmental disease mainly caused by avoidable lifestyle factors, according to the latest evidence released today at the World Cancer Congress in Melbourne. The findings, published by the Union for International Cancer Control and American Cancer Society in an update of the world Cancer Atlas, suggest cancer is more often caused by the…

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