Study links birth size and breast cancer (Reuters via Yahoo! News)
Women who were bigger and longer babies may be more likely to develop breast cancer, researchers reported on Tuesday.
Women who were bigger and longer babies may be more likely to develop breast cancer, researchers reported on Tuesday.
Baby girls of larger than average length and weight at birth are at increased risk of breast cancer, analysis suggests.
Breast cancer survivors report feeling more fatigue and negative emotions in a typical day than their cancer-free peers, but round-the-clock monitoring demonstrates that their vital signs and level activity are no different, according to an international study.
Big babies have an increased risk of breast cancer later, according to a new study finding bigger birth size, especially length, boosts breast cancer risk.
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 29 (UPI) — A U.S. sociologist says breast cancer patients vary in the way they try to make sense of their disease.