

This Breast Cancer Site ad
provides a wonderful way to give to a good cause for FREE!
Please tell ten friends to tell ten today! If every day enough people just
click on their site, they can meet their goal of donating at least one free
mammogram a day to an underprivileged woman.
In 2009, visitor clicks funded over
2,800 mammograms.
It
takes less than a minute to go to their site and click on the pink button.
This doesn't cost you a thing.
Their corporate sponsors and advertisers donate mammograms in exchange for
advertising on The Breast Cancer Site. The higher the number of daily
visits to the site, the more they donate. But since each person can only
click once per day, we need to encourage more to help out.
Here's the website link. Pass it along to people you know, any way you
can!
Click to
Give @ The Breast Cancer Site
(http://www.TheBreastCancerSite.com)
You could also sign up to receive their daily email reminder using their
Remember to Click
link.
Inflammatory Breast Cancer Alert - KOMO-TV - Seattle, Washington - News Special Report: Inflammatory Breast Cancer Story - Breast cancer is something women think they know all about: Look for lumps; have mammograms; see our doctors. But none of that will save you from one silent breast cancer killer that women know virtually nothing about. It's called "inflammatory breast cancer," and it's something every woman must know about.
FORE (Foundation for Osteoporosis Research and Education) Women pregnant and breastfeeding can go to the FORE to learn about how to protect their bones. This is a very wonderful web site. According to a recent survey conducted across the US, many men & women are still unaware of their risk for bone fracture and osteoporosis.
Calcium & Vitamin D, don't stop taking your calcium - A helpful printout from FORE.
Learn Continuous Chest Compression CPR with Sarver Heart Center’s Newest 6-Minute Video - Every three days, more Americans die from sudden cardiac arrest than the number who died in the 9-11 attacks. You can lessen this recurring loss by learning this hands-only CPR method that doubles a person’s chance of surviving cardiac arrest. It’s easy and does not require mouth-to-mouth contact.
copyright © 2011 Sylvia Boyd — Updated June 14, 2011
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