Skip to main content

Soya Supports Pink October

IN THIS year’s Pink October, it is good to look back in history to understand how October came to be “colored” pink.

In 1985, AstraZeneca, the makers of breast cancer drugs Arimidex and Tamoxifen, founded the National Breast Cancer Awareness Month in an effort to promote mammography, believed as the most effective weapon in the fight against cancer, in the spirit of Henry de Bracton’s classic adage, “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” Eight years later, senior corporate vice president of the Estee Lauder Companies, Evelyn Lauder, founded The Breast Cancer Research Foundation and established the Pink Ribbon as its symbol. In the fall of 1991, the Susan G. Komen Foundation handed out pink ribbons to participants in its New York City race for breast cancer survivors. And the rest is history.

Each October, accepted internationally as the Breast Cancer Awareness Month, people raise money for donation to breast cancer care or research programs. In fact, some famous landmarks—such as The Harbour Bridge (Sydney, Australia), Niagara Falls (Ontario, Canada), The French Affiliate Building (Paris, France), The Angel of Peace (Munich, Germany), Constantine’s Arch (Rome, Italy), and Tokyo Tower (Tokyo, Japan)—are lit pink in October to support the advocacy.

Meanwhile, seven scientists... (Read more.)


This article appears in the SunStar Cebu newspaper on 13 October 2010.

Comments

Popular Posts

Deadly X-Gene Mutants

A RECENT study on macrophages (i.e. defensive cells in our body that engulf threatening substances inside our body) introduced me to a lethal, genetic disease that targets the male population. This disease is called Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), named after the French neurologist Guillaume Benjamin Amand Duchenne, who described it in 1861. While it has an incidence of one in 3,500 newborn males, health experts consider this as the most common lethal disease of childhood around the world. Mutation in the male (X) chromosome [dystrophin gene, locus Xp21] causes a rapid degeneration of the muscles, leading into an eventual loss of walking ability and then death. While females do not exhibit symptoms, they can be carriers of these defective genes, especially if the father had this condition or the mother is also a carrier. Symptoms usually appear before age five; at times visible in early infancy. These symptoms involve... ( Read more .)  This article appears in Sun-Star Ce...

Joy, Temperance and Repose

“I RECKON being ill as one of the great pleasures of life, provided one is not too ill and is not obliged to work till one is better,” wrote Samuel Butler in The Way of All Flesh (1903). The term “antioxidant” was originally used in the 18th century to refer to a chemical that prevents the consumption of oxygen in laboratory experiments. However, in the late 19th and early 20th century, extensive study exploded... ( Read more ) This article appeared in SunStar Cebu newspaper on 02 June 2010.