The Post
  • News
    • Education
    • Hornsby
    • Ku-ring-gai
    • Willoughby
    • Council
      • Hornsby Council
      • Ku-ring-gai Council
      • Willoughby Council
    • Letters
      • Letters to the editor
  • Digital Editions
  • Arts
  • Columnists
    • Tina Brown
    • Claudia Butjerevic
    • Steve Panozzo
    • Cecilia Castle
    • Rejimon Punchayil
    • Karen Humphries
    • Allan Shi
    • Nicolette Boele
    • Janelle McIntosh
    • John Zavaglia
  • Community
    • Events
      • Community Event
      • Concert
  • Health & Lifestyle
  • Business Directory
  • Advertise
  • News
    • Education
    • Hornsby
    • Ku-ring-gai
    • Willoughby
    • Council
      • Hornsby Council
      • Ku-ring-gai Council
      • Willoughby Council
    • Letters
      • Letters to the editor
  • Digital Editions
  • Arts
  • Columnists
    • Tina Brown
    • Claudia Butjerevic
    • Steve Panozzo
    • Cecilia Castle
    • Rejimon Punchayil
    • Karen Humphries
    • Allan Shi
    • Nicolette Boele
    • Janelle McIntosh
    • John Zavaglia
  • Community
    • Events
      • Community Event
      • Concert
  • Health & Lifestyle
  • Business Directory
  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
The Post
The Post
Home The Post Health & Lifestyle

Wear Teal for Ovarian Cancer

by The Post
1 February 2024
in Health & Lifestyle
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0 0

February marks Ovarian Cancer Awareness month. 

In Australia every year, around 1,800 women are diagnosed with ovarian cancer. The disease is particularly devastating as 70% of cases will not be diagnosed until the cancer has progressed into advanced stages. Women diagnosed in the advanced stage are only given a 29% survival beyond five years of diagnosis, making it the most lethal of the gynaecological cancers.

Detection is often late due to ovarian cancer’s vague symptoms and a lack of early detection testing. Symptoms include cramping, bloating, feeling full, and needing to urinate more often.

The Ovarian Cancer Research Foundation are raising awareness and funding for ovarian cancer research throughout February.

OCRF have outlined simple ways to raise awareness:

  • Share facts and statistics about ovarian cancer through social media
  • Share your own story
  • Encourage your workplace to get involved
  • Start conversations with friends and family
  • Myth bust the common misconceptions

For more information, visit www.ocrf.com.au/get-involved/ovarian-cancer-awareness-month

The Post

The Post

ADVERTISEMENT
  • News
  • Digital Editions
  • Arts
  • Columnists
  • Community
  • Health & Lifestyle
  • Business Directory
  • Advertise

© 2024 King Publications Pty Limited - ABN 93 636 850 550
No AI Training
This publication is not meant for training generative AI. The author and publisher have the exclusive right to use this work for training AI and developing machine learning language models.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Reach Local Readers

Promote your business with The Post. View our latest advertising rates today.

See Media Kit
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Education
    • Hornsby
    • Ku-ring-gai
    • Willoughby
    • Council
      • Hornsby Council
      • Ku-ring-gai Council
      • Willoughby Council
    • Letters
      • Letters to the editor
  • Digital Editions
  • Arts
  • Columnists
    • Tina Brown
    • Claudia Butjerevic
    • Steve Panozzo
    • Cecilia Castle
    • Rejimon Punchayil
    • Karen Humphries
    • Allan Shi
    • Nicolette Boele
    • Janelle McIntosh
    • John Zavaglia
  • Community
    • Events
      • Community Event
      • Concert
  • Health & Lifestyle
  • Business Directory
  • Advertise
Newsletter
Go to mobile version