Let's get those Mammies Grammied and the boobs tubed, ladies! 

This month, please call your local hospital or Womens' Health Center and schedule your mammography....if you have no health insurance and/or cannot pay, contact the hospital to find out about FREE mammograms.

The Susan G. Komen Foundation celebrates 25 years of spreading the word on finding a cure for Breast Cancer!

The Race for the Cure and the Pink Ribbons we proudly wear; the pink products we purchase from Pampered Chef,  Tupperware, and Proctor and Gamble, to name just a few,  are only a small portion of what we can do to help keep the fight against this killer going until the day comes when Breast Cancer is beaten!

From the Susan G. Komen Foundation website:

Susan G. Komen for the Cure is fighting every minute of every day to finally, once and for all, finish what we started and achieve our vision of a world without breast cancer.

Fulfilling the Promise

Nancy G. Brinker promised her dying sister, Susan G. Komen, she would do everything in her power to end breast cancer forever. In 1982, that promise became Susan G. Komen for the Cure and launched the global breast cancer movement. Today, Komen for the Cure is the world’s largest grassroots network of breast cancer survivors and activists fighting to save lives, empower people, ensure quality care for all and energize science to find the cures. Thanks to events like the Komen Race for the Cure, we have invested more than $1.2 billion to fulfill our promise, becoming the largest source of nonprofit funds dedicated to the fight against breast cancer in the world.

Breast Cancer Then and Now

Since 1982, Komen for the Cure has played a critical role in every major advance in the fight against breast cancer – transforming how the world talks about and treats this disease and helping to turn millions of breast cancer patients into breast cancer survivors. We are proud of our contribution to some real victories:

  • More early detection – nearly 75 percent of women over 40 years old now receive regular mammograms, the single most effective tool for detecting breast cancer early (in 1982, less than 30 percent received a clinical exam).
  • More hope – the five-year survival rate for breast cancer, when caught early before it spreads beyond the breast, is now 98 percent (compared to 74 percent in 1982).
  • More research – the federal government now devotes more than $900 million each year to breast cancer research, treatment and prevention (compared to $30 million in 1982).
  • More survivors – America’s 2.5 million breast cancers survivors, the largest group of cancer survivors in the U.S., are a living testament to the power of society and science to save lives.

Let's do it to it!   Cheryl