Cleveland has really pulled off something extraordinary with this club

children with cancer May 29th, 2008

Ever wonder why we all play cavity back irons but insist on blade wedges? Maybe it’s because cavity back wedges don’t have bounce options? Maybe they don’t have enough feel? Maybe they’re just plain ugly?

Cleveland has really pulled off something extraordinary with this club. The 3 bounce options are great. I have a high bounce 56* and a low bounce 60*. This combination gives me all the options I need. I can pinch the 60* off the fairway or open up the 56* for flop shots and sand explosions. The CMM metal is soft as butter with lots of feedback. It really does feel just like a forged wedge. And they look just like classic wedges at address.

For what it’s worth, I never ever thought I’d take my Titleist Vokey’s out of the bag, but the CG11’s made me a believer. They’re actually forgiving and distance control on half to three quarter shots is super!!!!!

Bottom Line: These wedges can do everything that a 588 or Vokey can do (for the mid-handicap player) with the added benefit of forgiveness on off-center hits. You’ll hit more balls into 1-putt range with these wedges!

More Canadian children surviving cancer

children with cancer April 12th, 2008

Each year on P.E.I., roughly five children are diagnosed with cancer.
While the handful of cases may seem relatively small, ranging in recent years from a low of three in 2007 to a high of six in 2006, each diagnosis is devastating.
“Mostly what happens is a parent knows that their child is really sick, but sometimes the kids are not that sick and (the cancer diagnosis) is a huge shock,’’ said local pediatrician Dr. Kathryn Bigsby.
“People tell us all about the emotions that they experience: the denial and the grief.’’
The uplifting news, released Wednesday by the Canadian Cancer Society, is that more Canadian children with cancer are surviving.
For all childhood cancers combined, the five-year survival is estimated to be 82 per cent — an increase of 11 per cent over 15 years.
“The improvement in cures are very heartening,’’ said Bigsby.
“The disappointment is we don’t know why kids get cancer in the way that we can do things that we know will stop kids from getting cancer.’’
Bigsby said Island children with cancer receive the same high level of treatment as children anywhere else in the country.
When a child from P.E.I. is suspected of having cancer, she said, the child is quickly seen by the pediatric oncology specialists in Halifax.
“Most children are offered the opportunity to be on a clinical trial and if there is no clinical trial or the family for whatever reason doesn’t feel the clinical trial doesn’t really suit their situation, they are offered the best treatment that is currently available,’’ she said.
She said the P.E.I. government has provided good ongoing support to the Atlantic Provinces Pediatric Hematology Oncology Network and she urges the province to continue to do so.
Margaret Arsenault of Summerside remains grateful for her daughter, Nathalie, surviving kidney cancer after being diagnosed at just age two. Margaret also beat breast cancer through surgery that followed early detection of the disease through a mammogram.
Arsenault said her own diagnosis did not have the same sharp sting as news years early that her baby had cancer.
“That wasn’t nearly as bad because we had been through the anger and through the frustration and through the hell,’’ she said.
“It was terrible. It was probably the worse thing that anybody can tell a parent, that your child has the ‘C’ word.’’
Arsenault offered her personal stories of cancer to the media Wednesday at the release in Charlottetown of the Canadian Cancer Statistics 2008 report.
She also makes hats for women with cancer who have lost their hair through treatment and she co-ordinates a visit program for women who have had a mastectomy.
“My involvement with the Cancer Society under different programs is my way of saying ‘Praise the Lord, I can do that’,” she said.

Statistics show more kids surviving cancer

children with cancer April 12th, 2008

More Canadian children with cancer are surviving, according to released today by the Canadian Cancer Society. For all childhood cancers combined, the five-year survival rate is estimated to be 82 per cent — an increase of 11 per cent over 15 years.

“Increased survival rates are obviously good news for everyone,” said Anne McTiernan-Gamble, Executive Director of the Canadian Cancer Society, New Brunswick. “This dramatic increase since the mid-1980s is attributed to significant progress in cancer research.”

According to , approximately 850 Canadian children between birth and 14 years of age develop cancer each year, and about 135 die from the disease. Although rare, cancer remains the leading cause of death from disease in Canadian children over one month of age and as such, it is of public health importance.

“A childhood cancer diagnosis is a terrible blow to a family and it can impact them in numerous ways,” Ms. McTiernan-Gamble said. “There is a very rapid change in their lives that involves dealing with the complicated web of medical treatment, and traveling to treatment facilities. Many parents are forced to work less, or stop working altogether in order to care for their child, and as such significant financial stress is often added to the mix.”

The Canadian Cancer Society, New Brunswick supports families of children with cancer in a number of ways, offering support, information and financial assistance: Support and information are available to families through cancer.ca and over the phone through CancerConnection; Financial assistance is available for those who must travel for cancer treatment; and a Summer Camp experience specifically for children living with cancer is offered annually in July through Camp Goodtime. In addition, in 2007, the Canadian Cancer Society, New Brunswick released a study confirming the financial burden of caring for a child with cancer as serious and substantial. Additionally, it has advocated for patient navigators and a provincial travel assistance program.

“We will continue to advocate for programs and services that will help to ease the burden of cancer on families,” Ms. McTiernan-Gamble said.

Childhood cancer highlights

• Since 1985, there has been a dramatic decline in childhood cancer mortality rates (dropping from approximately 40 to 20 per million children*)

• Incidence rates of childhood cancer have remained relatively stable since 1985

• According to statistics released by the New Brunswick Department of Health, there were 21 pediatric oncology patients in New Brunswick in 2006/07

• Children with cancer are referred to the IWK in Nova Scotia, or the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Laval and the CHU Sainte-Justine Children’s Hospital in Quebec

• The most common childhood cancer is leukemia (33% of new cases)

New Brunswick highlights

• This year approximately 4,300 New Brunswickers will be diagnosed with cancer and about 1,940 will die from the disease

• Lung cancer remains the leading cause of cancer death for men and women in New Brunswick

is prepared, printed and distributed through a collaboration of the Canadian Cancer Society, the Public Health Agency of Canada, the National Cancer Institute of Canada, Statistics Canada, provincial/territorial cancer registries, as well as university-based and provincial/territorial cancer agency-based cancer researchers.

The Canadian Cancer Society is a national community-based organization of volunteers whose mission is the eradication of cancer and the enhancement of the quality of life of people living with cancer. When you want to know more about cancer, visit our website at www.cancer.ca or call our toll-free, bilingual Cancer Information Service at 1 888 939-3333.
Miramichi Leader, Canada

Survival rates soar for children with cancer

children with cancer April 12th, 2008

TORONTO - Children diagnosed with cancer in Canada have a far better chance of survival than in the past, but also will likely suffer from health problems in the future, the Canadian Cancer Society said Thursday.

Based on the success of earlier detection and improvements in treatment, the survival rate from childhood cancer has increased from 71 per cent to 82 per cent, an improvement of 11 per cent in the past 15 years, said Heather Logan, director of Cancer Control Policy. That means for every 100 children under the age of 14 who are diagnosed with cancer, 11 more are surviving at least five years past the date of remission.

“That’s 11 more faces that are alive now that wouldn’t have survived the disease nearly 15 years ago,” Logan said Wednesday while releasing a 108-page annual report titled Canadian Cancer Statistics 2008. “We need to know more about what causes childhood cancer so we can implement programs to prevent disease from occurring in the first place.”

Doctors, however, say those children who do survive should expect to suffer some form of delayed side effect, caused either by the original cancer or the treatment for it. While more are surviving, health repercussions still linger and are, in fact, more prevalent because of the higher survival rate. About two-thirds of all children who survive cancer will suffer at least one late effect from their treatment, and about one-third will suffer serious effects.

Those effects can appear anywhere between one week and 20 years down the road, and come in the form of neuropsychological changes that may appear as learning disabilities, secondary cancers caused by the chemotherapy, damages to organ systems and infertility.

“We need to know precisely how current therapy causes late onset side effects, to know how we need to modify current therapy even when that therapy is effective in curing the cancer,” said Dr. Paul Grundy, director of Alberta’s Children Cancer Program.

While little is known about what causes childhood cancer, doctors say environmental concerns that often cause cancer in adults have not had the same chance to harm children. Grundy said therapy for childhood cancer tends to be very intense and long, and its impact can be very severe.

“If we don’t treat their cancer, they’re going to die,” he said. “There isn’t a choice. It’s an area we need to study, but at the moment it’s not usually a choice that we can make at the point of our initial therapy.” Grundy added that few studies or tests have been done on the long-term effects of cancer treatment on children because of the lower survival rate in the past, which has limited the cases researchers can observe.

“We don’t know what the late effects or the possible late effects may be 30, 40 or 50 years after cancer chemotherapy because we don’t have a significant number of children who survived cancer,” he said.

While the numbers indicated that the childhood survival rate increased, the incidence of childhood cancer remained relatively constant over the same period. About 850 children below the age of 14 are diagnosed with some form of cancer each year. The number is relatively low compared to adult cases.

The overall statistics suggested that 166,400 people will be diagnosed with some form of cancer in 2008, an increase of 6,500 over last year. There also will be an estimated 73,800 deaths, 1,100 more than in 2007. The report attributes the increases to a growing and aging population.

Prostate cancer was the most common form among men, with 24,700 expected new cases, while 22,400 women are expected to be diagnosed with breast cancer. Lung cancer remains the highest killer for both men and women, with 11,000 and 9,200 respectively. Almost 40 per cent of women and 45 per cent of men will develop cancer in their lifetime, and approximately 25 per cent of Canadians will die from the disease.

National Post
Canada.com, Canada