Don’t Blur the Message on Cancer Screening

I hope this week’s headlines and editorials don’t add to the blurriness of the public’s perception of cancer screening – that people might begin to think it’s a bad thing all around. The details matter….screening if it’s done right can save lives and dollars. That’s because for most tumor types, treating advanced, metastatic disease is costlier than treatment of early-stage, curable tumors.

Posted in Breast Cancer, cancer screening, Medical News, Oncology (cancer)Tagged , , , , , , 1 Comment on Don’t Blur the Message on Cancer Screening

Patients’ Words, Unfiltered, Medical Journalism and Evidence

Yesterday’s post was not really about Avastin, but about medical journalism and how patients’ voices are handled by the media. L. Husten, writing on a Forbes blog, cried that the press fawned, inappropriately, over patients’ words at the FDA hearing last week, and that led him to wonder why and if journalists should pay attention to […]

Posted in Breast Cancer, cancer treatment, Empowered Patient, health care costs, Medical News, Oncology (cancer), PolicyTagged , , , , , , , , 2 Comments on Patients’ Words, Unfiltered, Medical Journalism and Evidence

Vicious Verbiage Targets Cancer Patients’ Voices, at Cardiobrief

A journalist who covers medical matters of the heart grabbed my attention on the Fourth of July. In The Voice of the Patient: Time To Bring Out the Muzzle?, Larry Husten at Forbes’ Cardiobrief blog, insinuates that the women who spoke at the FDA’s Avastin hearings are simpletons. In his short strip, Husten skips the possibility […]

Posted in Breast Cancer, Communication, Empowered Patient, from the author, journalism, languageTagged , , , , , , , , , 6 Comments on Vicious Verbiage Targets Cancer Patients’ Voices, at Cardiobrief
newsletter software