In coming days, after NFL teams clean up and store their pink cleats for another year, politicians return their ribbons to desk drawers, and the flood of breast cancer stories subsides, another cancer will have its month in the sun: lung cancer. Only it won't be sunshine that will prevail, but dark and threatening cloud cover with the occasional deadly lightning strike.
November is Lung Cancer Awareness Month -- only you probably didn't know that. Here are some other things that polling indicates you probably didn't know: lung cancer will kill three times more of us this year than any other cancer, you have a 1 in 14 chance of getting lung cancer in your lifetime, just about half of us know someone who has or died of lung cancer, and close to 80 percent more women will die of lung cancer in 2011 than breast cancer.
Why should you know about lung cancer? Precious little is said or written about it. You could call it benign neglect, except the impact is lethal. Lung cancer's relatively low profile is compounded by large amounts of misinformation, misperception, and stereotyping. The result is that the deadliest cancer killer of all runs rampant.
I will be the first to admit that before my wife -- a life-long never smoker -- was diagnosed in early 2010 (FYI: women with lung cancer are twice as likely as men with the disease to have never smoked) lung cancer just wasn't on our radar screen. Now our family can't get it off our radar screen. And we're determined to get it on yours, somewhere.
That's why we are today announcing Leaders of the Lung Cancer Free Worldâ„ -- a nationwide communications campaign created with one goal in mind: to generate greater public awareness and understanding of lung cancer, the nation's number one cancer killer by a factor of three.
Advertise, editorialize, promote, petition, Tweet, plead, cajole. We are prepared to do whatever it takes to get you to notice and engage.
The Leaders campaign brings together a complementary portfolio of some of the nation's leading lung cancer organizations -- The CHEST Foundation of the American College of Chest Physicians, The National Lung Cancer Partnership and Uniting Against Lung Cancer -- who will coordinate on, support and be the financial beneficiaries of this effort. By taking a multi-front assault on lung cancer, we hope to:
This post began with a reference -- offered with reverence and admiration -- to the breast cancer fight, and the absolutely brilliant job women, working together, have done raising the profile of the disease, generating greater understanding, and galvanizing resources. With lung cancer diagnoses among women up six-fold in the last 30 years -- and with the disease now killing substantially more women than breast, ovarian and uterine cancers combined -- we hope and pray that women will join the fight, bringing their smarts, energy, know-how and determination to bear against this scurrilous disease that is taking such a horrific toll on them and their families.
As for our family, we don't question why lung cancer happens and why it happened to ours. What we don't understand is why we are not much further along in the fight against this awful disease. I say this honestly and without rancor, irony or self-pity: this campaign may come too late to help our family, but we hope it will help yours.
Join us. There is so much you can do. Sign the petition encouraging the president and Congress to declare lung cancer a national health crisis. Donate to our partners. Encourage a loved one to stop smoking. Help us spread the word on Facebook and Twitter.
Over the next five years, more than 1,000,000 Americans will be diagnosed with lung cancer. Together, we can help save many of them. It's time to fight back.
Kelcey Harrison: I'm the Chick Running From New York to San Francisco
Traci L. Stanard, CPT-NSCA, CWC: The Congratulations Cancer
Andrea Paine: Running Gave Me Strength, Cancer Gave Me Courage
(Don't go running near busy streets.)
They focus on cigarettes too much. Cigarettes are not good but candles put out a smoke that is oily. Some floor cleaners you spray have oily products in them. Insecticides are a biggie, too. A wood burning fireplace is really hard on lungs.
It is sad they blame cancer on 2nd hand smoke. It keeps them for looking for other carcinogenics. I may be wrong but I believe that you would have to smoke it yourself to get cancer, unless you are fastened in with someone smoking in a small room.
I ran for over a year. Two of our friends ran with my husband and I loved it and ran in the snow and the rain when I could. Then we moved and had a lot of busy things going on and I quit running. I have never started back. I quit about 20 years ago. It is really hard to start back.
I always have retained water and when running I would sweat so much I didn't have much water.
I can't run now, I have heart and lung problems, but I may try walking.
I highly recommend running. You have to experience it for a few days to realize how good it is.
Good luck to you and your family.