Life Over Cancer
I've been researching breast cancer a lot more since my grandmother's recent breast cancer diagnosis. I've supported breast cancer research for a long time now but the fact that it is now a part of my family's medical history I feel like I need to educate myself more about it and somehow fight a little bit harder to prevent it.
Here is a great article I ran across by Dr. Keith Block on preventing breast cancer recurrences.
Avoiding  Refined Sugar  Helps Prevent Breast Cancer  Recurrence If  you ingest whole  foods, insulin will be secreted slowly and the body  will manage this  well. Insulin is needed to carry glucose into your  tissues and is  essential for providing much needed fuel. However,  ingest a candy bar,  your favorite brand of cookies, or 12 ounces of  soda pop -- what I like  to refer to as carbonated belly wash -- and the  cells in your pancreas  will respond with a surge of insulin. In  recent years,  researchers found that women with early stage breast  cancer who had the  highest insulin levels were  twice as likely to have their tumor  metastasize, and three times as  likely to die of breast  cancer,  as women with the lowest insulin  levels. For this reason, I believe any  patient combating breast cancer  or trying to  avoid a recurrence would be wise to have their doctor  routinely monitor  their insulin and blood sugar levels, as well as their  insulin growth  factor (IGF-1). Choosing a whole foods diet and staying  fit can reduce  the deleterious effect that elevated sugar and insulin  levels can have  on both the risk of recurrence and risk of death. In  addition,  following a nutritional, fitness and therapeutic supplement  program can  help achieve or maintain improved levels. Even  though all  therapeutic interventions should be individualized to match  the needs  of each patient, I'm convinced that certain dietary  recommendations are  fundamental to achieving improved health. These   include:
 In addition, while research has  shown that mind-spirit  interventions improve quality of life for cancer  survivors, there is also data that suggests  they boost immune  function, increase cancer-fighting   melatonin  levels, and can play a role in helping prevent recurrence.
 ©  2010  Keith I. Block, M.D., author of Life   Over Cancer:  The Block Center Program for  Integrative Cancer  Treatment Author   Bio Keith I. Block, M.D. is Director  of Integrative  Medical Education at the University of Illinois College  of Medicine;  Medical Director of the Block Center for Integrative Cancer  Treatment in Evanston, Illinois; and founder  and Scientific Director of  the nonprofit Institute for Integrative Cancer  Research and Education. He is also editor in  chief of the peer-reviewed  professional journal Integrative Cancer  Therapies and a member of the National Cancer  Institute's Physician Data Query  Complementary and Alternative Medicine  (CAM) Editorial Board. For  more information, please visit www.blockmd.com.  Become a fan of Life Over Cancer and the Block Center for Integrative Cancer   Treatment on Facebook. 
       
By Keith I. Block, M.D.,
Author  of Life Over Cancer: The Block Center  Program for Integrative Cancer Treatment