First Person: A Supportive Partner Makes All the Difference when Fighting Breast Cancer
















To mark Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Yahoo News asked women who have had breast cancer or are going through treatment to write about the people in their lives who stood by them and cared for them. Here’s one story.


FIRST PERSON | It was Feb. 19, 2007, when I was told I had breast cancer.












I was just 32, with two children, Adam, 4, and Kaitlyn, 14, and a marriage that was close to ending after 15 years. We were living in Hillsborough, N.C., and moving to Efland.


Little did we know that move was a blessing in disguise for our whole family.


My husband, Kenny, and I had been having a lot of issues for a few years, most of them financial. We had started renting to own a home from a “friend,” and things were going well until he unexpectedly re-financed the house and our payment went up almost $ 400 a month. We tried to keep up, but we couldn’t, so we moved into a smaller home. This caused a lot more tension in between us, and it was almost the straw that broke up the marriage.


One day after moving, I was putting a box in the top of the closet and felt something “out of place” on the outside of my left breast. I mentioned it to my husband, and he told me to make a doctor’s appointment. Well, I brushed it aside but then Kaitlyn wanted to play soccer and had to have a physical so I figured I’d make myself an appointment too just to see what our doctor thought.


On my 32nd birthday, I went to see our family doctor. As soon as he felt it, he sent me for a mammogram the next day–Valentine’s Day. Kenny, Adam and I went to the imaging center at Duke. I thought it would be a cyst or something less severe, so why not bring my son along instead of finding a babysitter? Based on the imaging from the mammogram and ultrasound they all but said, “It’s cancer.” I was sent the next day to have a biopsy.


We got the call Monday afternoon. My husband answered, our family doc had called, and was told it was stage II intraductal carcinoma. I was in complete shock. My husband held me and let me cry. Starting that day, our relationship changed for the better. I always joked that cancer saved my marriage. But, in all reality, it did.


Kenny never missed a doctor’s appointment, which is one of the greatest things about having a good partner during this time. With chemotherapy, you will develop something called chemo brain. Yes, it is real! He remembered all the details from the appointments.


In March, I started chemotherapy. I would go every other week over an 18-week period, nine total rounds. A lot of those doctor’s appointments, especially chemo days, were very long days and if he weren’t there to keep me company I would’ve gone insane. We laughed, we talked, we spent a lot of time together, and got to know each other again. We learned to love again because you never know when tragedy can strike. And if he weren’t there, I don’t know who would’ve gone to get me french fries. He really was my rock. When I doubted I could do anymore or just needed to cry, he was always there and always telling me we would get through this. July 11, 2007, was my last day of chemo. I was so happy to have that part of it behind us but there was still more to go.


I am a stay-at-home mom, so my job is to cook, clean and take care of my family. I just didn’t have the energy to do that. But thanks to my wonderful husband and completely awesome daughter, I didn’t have to worry about that stuff at all. Another perk to having a supportive partner is that they understand you just can’t do a lot of what you are used to doing when you’re so exhausted from fighting cancer. And if ever you need to take time for yourself, it is during this time! My house got cleaned, food got served and kids got taken care of and that took a lot off of my worried mind!


After I had my bilateral mastectomy on Aug. 9, I thought I was a freak. I couldn’t do reconstruction right away, so here I was, a 32-year-old woman walking around with no breasts. I thought, “That’s a big part of what makes me a woman, now what?” But I was so wrong about that and Kenny let me know how wrong I was. I tell everyone if I had any doubt about how much he loved me this is when it all went away. I couldn’t take a shower or a bath for a few days after and I had these drain tubes that had to be emptied twice a day, which I couldn’t do on my own. My wonderfully supportive husband emptied my drains, measured the drainage and basically bathed me. If he didn’t love me I don’t think that would have ever happened. Today, we have been married almost 19 years and are happier than we’ve ever been. I know that sounds cliché, but it’s the truth. We let the little things go now and just love each other. It’s not always sunshine and lollipops. But we’re together, and we’re living and loving every day.


So I guess what I am saying here is there are so many areas in your life where you will need that supportive partner to help you fight cancer and to keep you going. Whether it’s keeping up with appointments, remembering what the doctor says, making you laugh, getting you french fries or just holding you, you need a supportive partner. It could be a sibling, a parent, even an adult child but you need someone. No one should go through this difficult, terrible journey on her own; it’s just too much for one person. I really like the term co-survivor because that is what you are doing: You are surviving this together.


Diseases/Conditions News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Amnesty Int: Ivory Coast torturing detainees
















ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast (AP) — Ivory Coast security officials are torturing dozens of detainees by administering electric shocks and other forms of abuse, Amnesty International alleged Friday.


The victims include people charged with endangering state security in the wake of a recent spate of attacks targeting military installations. Since early August, unknown gunmen have carried out roughly 10 attacks at checkpoints, military bases and other installations throughout the country, including in the commercial capital of Abidjan.












United Nations officials have said that more than 200 people have been detained on suspicion of involvement in the attacks, and that torture has been documented at multiple detention facilities.


Gaetan Mootoo, West Africa researcher for Amnesty, said an investigation team received reports of a range of abuses during a recent month-long visit.


“We were able to meet dozens of detainees who told us how they have been tortured by electricity or had molten plastic poured on their bodies,” Mootoo said. “Two of them have been sexually abused. Some have been held for many months denied contact with their families and access to lawyers.”


Army spokesman Cherif Moussa denied the torture allegations Friday. “Our camps are not concentration camps,” he said.


However, he acknowledged the possibility that individual soldiers may occasionally “go beyond what they are allowed to do” when dealing with inmates.


He added that the government tried to ensure that inmates’ rights were respected. “We want to prove that we are not abusing people’s rights,” he said. “We’re working for the state’s security. We’re working for the people’s security.”


Earlier this month, the Associated Press interviewed former detainees at a military camp in the southwestern port town of San Pedro who described widespread beatings as well as the use of electric shocks. A guard at the camp corroborated most of the claims, though camp commanders denied them.


In its statement Friday, Amnesty described how one detainee, a police officer, had died as a result of the torture he endured at the San Pedro camp.


“Serge Herve Kribie was arrested in San Pedro on August 21 by the national army and interrogated about recent attacks,” Amnesty said. “He was stripped naked, tied to a pole, had water poured on his body, and was then subjected to electric shocks. He died a few hours later.”


Amnesty said that some detainees were only released after ransoms were paid. One detainee told the rights group: “My parents first paid 50,000 CFA (a little under US $ 100) and then after my release, my jailers went at my house and demanded a higher sum. I told them that I couldn’t pay such an amount and they agreed to receive 20,000 CFA more (about US$ 40).”


The government has blamed the attacks on allies of former President Laurent Gbagbo, who was arrested in April 2011. Gbagbo’s refusal to cede office after losing the November 2010 election to now-President Alassane Ouattara sparked six months of violence in which at least 3,000 were killed.


Amnesty researchers also met with some of the more than 100 Gbagbo allies – including his wife, Simone – who are being detained on charges stemming from the post-election violence.


“Some of them told us that despite the fact that they have been held since April 2011, they only saw an investigating judge twice for less than a few hours,” Mootoo said.


Despite widespread evidence that forces loyal to Ouattara also committed atrocities during the violence, none have been arrested or credibly investigated, sparking allegations of victor’s justice.


Also Friday, in Amsterdam, judges at the International Criminal Court rejected a request for release by former president Gbagbo, who is being detained on suspicion of crimes against humanity.


Africa News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Jill Scott to star in Fox Searchlight’s ‘Baggage Claim’
















NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) – Jill Scott, the Grammy-winning neo soul singer-songwriter, will star in “Baggage Claim” for Fox Searchlight, the studio announced on Thursday.


She will appear alongside Paula Patton and Derek Luke in this romantic comedy from writer/director David E. Talbert.












Patton will play Montana Moore, a flight attendant who tries to find a man before her sister’s upcoming wedding. Scott will play Gail Best, Moore’s blunt best friend and coworker.


The film is set to begin production this fall and is tentatively scheduled to open in theaters next year.


Scott, who has won three Grammys and garnered 13 nominations, just took to the small screen in Lifetime’s “Steel Magnolias.” She has also had roles in a variety of movies, including Tyler Perry’s “Why Did I Get Married.”


Movies News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Jill Scott to star in Fox Searchlight’s ‘Baggage Claim’
















NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) – Jill Scott, the Grammy-winning neo soul singer-songwriter, will star in “Baggage Claim” for Fox Searchlight, the studio announced on Thursday.


She will appear alongside Paula Patton and Derek Luke in this romantic comedy from writer/director David E. Talbert.












Patton will play Montana Moore, a flight attendant who tries to find a man before her sister’s upcoming wedding. Scott will play Gail Best, Moore’s blunt best friend and coworker.


The film is set to begin production this fall and is tentatively scheduled to open in theaters next year.


Scott, who has won three Grammys and garnered 13 nominations, just took to the small screen in Lifetime’s “Steel Magnolias.” She has also had roles in a variety of movies, including Tyler Perry’s “Why Did I Get Married.”


Movies News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Tax gains lift Merck, but sales disappoint
















(Reuters) – Merck & Co Inc reported a higher-than-expected third-quarter profit, as a favorable tax rate and lower merger costs helped offset plunging sales of its former flagship product, Singulair, an asthma drug that began facing cheaper generics in August.


But overall company sales came in slightly below Wall Street expectations, as Singulair’s decline outpaced already grim predictions for it.












Merck, the No. 2 U.S. drugmaker, said on Friday it earned $ 1.73 billion, or 56 cents per share, compared with $ 1.69 billion, or 55 cents per share, a year earlier.


Excluding special items, Merck earned 95 cents per share. Analysts, on average, expected 92 cents.


The better-than-expected profit was largely due to the favorable impact of an overseas tax settlement as well as realization of foreign tax benefits, Merck said.


Jefferies & Co analyst Jeffrey Holford had predicted a tax rate of 26 percent, but it came in at 20.3 percent. He called the profit beat “low quality” because it was mostly due to the one-time tax gains.


“Gross margins were also weaker than expected,” Holford said, and noted that Singulair sales were about $ 75 million below what he had expected.


Merck spokesman Ron Rogers said the tax gains are not expected to carry over into the fourth quarter and that the drugmaker continues to expect a full-year tax rate of about 25 percent.


Global company revenue fell 4 percent to $ 11.49 billion in the quarter, below Wall Street expectations of $ 11.57 billion.


Merck tightened its full-year profit forecast to between $ 3.78 and $ 3.82 per share, from its earlier view of $ 3.75 to $ 3.85 per share.


Sales of Singulair tumbled 55 percent to $ 602 million. But a number of its newer products – including treatments for diabetes, hepatitis C and HIV – generated double-digit sales gains that helped cushion Singulair’s free fall.


And revenue from Gardasil, the company’s vaccine against cervical cancer, jumped 31 percent to $ 581 million.


But Merck will need to launch new drugs to withstand looming generic competition for other important medicines. Its Maxalt migraine drug, with $ 600 million in annual sales, goes generic in December, followed next year by its Temodar brain cancer medicine, which has near-blockbuster sales of $ 900 million.


Over the next 18 months, the company aims to seek six drug approvals, including marketing applications for new types of therapies for insomnia and osteoporosis.


(Reporting by Ransdell Pierson; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn, Jeffrey Benkoe and Steve Orlofsky)


Medications/Drugs News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Lull in fighting between Israel, Gaza militants
















JERUSALEM (AP) — A flare-up in fighting between Israel and militants from Gaza’s ruling Hamas movement has subsided.


Both sides say the government in Egypt helped to restore calm.












Israeli defense official Amos Gilad told Army Radio on Thursday that Egyptian security forces have “a very impressive ability” to convey to the militants that it is in their “supreme interest not to attack.”


Hamas spokesman Ayman Taha says Egypt conveyed Israel’s desire to contain the violence. He says Hamas told Egyptian that militants would cease fire if Israel would.


The Israeli military says militants haven’t attacked southern Israel since Wednesday night. It says the military hasn’t struck Gaza since Wednesday morning.


Militants fired some 80 rockets and mortars at Israel on Wednesday and Israeli aircraft struck four times.


Middle East News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Tax gains lift Merck, but sales disappoint
















(Reuters) – Merck & Co Inc reported a higher-than-expected third-quarter profit, as a favorable tax rate and lower merger costs helped offset plunging sales of its former flagship product, Singulair, an asthma drug that began facing cheaper generics in August.


But overall company sales came in slightly below Wall Street expectations, as Singulair’s decline outpaced already grim predictions for it.












Merck, the No. 2 U.S. drugmaker, said on Friday it earned $ 1.73 billion, or 56 cents per share, compared with $ 1.69 billion, or 55 cents per share, a year earlier.


Excluding special items, Merck earned 95 cents per share. Analysts, on average, expected 92 cents.


The better-than-expected profit was largely due to the favorable impact of an overseas tax settlement as well as realization of foreign tax benefits, Merck said.


Jefferies & Co analyst Jeffrey Holford had predicted a tax rate of 26 percent, but it came in at 20.3 percent. He called the profit beat “low quality” because it was mostly due to the one-time tax gains.


“Gross margins were also weaker than expected,” Holford said, and noted that Singulair sales were about $ 75 million below what he had expected.


Merck spokesman Ron Rogers said the tax gains are not expected to carry over into the fourth quarter and that the drugmaker continues to expect a full-year tax rate of about 25 percent.


Global company revenue fell 4 percent to $ 11.49 billion in the quarter, below Wall Street expectations of $ 11.57 billion.


Merck tightened its full-year profit forecast to between $ 3.78 and $ 3.82 per share, from its earlier view of $ 3.75 to $ 3.85 per share.


Sales of Singulair tumbled 55 percent to $ 602 million. But a number of its newer products – including treatments for diabetes, hepatitis C and HIV – generated double-digit sales gains that helped cushion Singulair’s free fall.


And revenue from Gardasil, the company’s vaccine against cervical cancer, jumped 31 percent to $ 581 million.


But Merck will need to launch new drugs to withstand looming generic competition for other important medicines. Its Maxalt migraine drug, with $ 600 million in annual sales, goes generic in December, followed next year by its Temodar brain cancer medicine, which has near-blockbuster sales of $ 900 million.


Over the next 18 months, the company aims to seek six drug approvals, including marketing applications for new types of therapies for insomnia and osteoporosis.


(Reporting by Ransdell Pierson; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn, Jeffrey Benkoe and Steve Orlofsky)


Medications/Drugs News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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