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Army Medicine fights cancer with advanced treatments

Early detection of the breast cancer can provide early treatment for the service member and or their beneficiaries. For those women diagnosed with localized (Stage 1) breast cancer there is a more than 98 percent probability that they will survive five or more years. (U.S. Air Force photo by L.A. Shively) Early detection of the breast cancer can provide early treatment for the service member or their beneficiaries. For those women diagnosed with localized (Stage 1) breast cancer there is a more than 98 percent probability that they will survive five or more years. (U.S. Air Force photo by L.A. Shively)

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Joint Base San Antonio, Texas — October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month and Army Medicine is diagnosing and treating service members with cancer using state-of-the-art techniques and tools that many civilian hospitals can't provide. 

The medical director for the John P. Murtha Cancer Center at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Army Col. (Dr.) Craig D. Shriver, stated, "Breast cancer is a readiness issue that affects around 1,000 Soldiers a year. In most cases, cancer can be cured but will remove a Soldier from duty for up to a year." 

Shriver recommends that all women perform self-exams monthly, receive a clinical exam yearly as part of your physical, and a full exam after turning 40. A woman would be considered at higher risk if her mother or sister had been previously diagnosed with breast cancer. 

All active duty, dependents, retirees, and their family members are eligible for care and the cancer center supports outlying clinics for cancer care including a virtual-health program with Fort Bragg's Womack Army Medical Center. 

"We have the ability to prevent cancer – we identify the gene markers and we can impact at a cellular level – and effectively make risk zero percent," said Shriver.

If diagnosed, the Murtha Cancer Center focuses on precision oncology while partnering across federal agencies, and with the Merck pharmaceutical company for the benefit of the patient. 

"We offer patients access to cutting-edge cancer diagnostic and treatment technologies as well as access to high-priority clinical cancer trials. For patients with a reoccurring cancer, the cancer cell is sequenced using the National Cancer Institute match and then targeted therapy is used to address that specific type of cancer," added Shriver.

The Murtha Cancer Center partners with Merck pharmaceuticals to identify medications that target the specific cancer because each type cancer can be treated strategically with different drugs. 

"Our facility has the breast tissue repository which patients are asked to sign up for following treatment to donate extra breast tissue. We then follow the patients and research the outcomes of the cancer and utilize DNA and protein analysis and record our findings with the Cancer Genome Project," said Shriver.

The Army has the ability to conduct more diverse cancer research in that the U.S. military is more representative of the nation's demographics including patients of ethnicities that are often not represented in civilian studies.

Disclaimer: Re-published content may have been edited for length and clarity. Read original post.

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Navy Medicine is prepared to care for women at sea

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10/17/2016
Navy Medicine treats and prevents women’s health issues around the world, including ships at sea, using innovative technology and research. The fleet ensures that its ships are equipped to support basic women’s health needs. While the depth of resources depends on the size and mission of each ship, all are equipped with emergency and routine birth control options, basic testing for sexually transmitted infections, equipment for well-woman exams and sick call examinations, and most importantly a professionally trained medical provider. (U.S. Navy photo)

Navy Medicine treats and prevents women’s health issues around the world, including at sea, using innovative technology and research

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Total Body Circuit

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10/13/2016
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Bodyweight Circuit

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10/13/2016
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Women’s health essential to force readiness

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10/11/2016
Women with a U.S. Marine Female Engagement Team operating in Europe demonstrated their capabilities in Marine Corps martial arts, non-lethal weapons, foreign weapons handling and combat lifesaving to Romanian and U.S.  Women comprise more than 27 percent of U.S. Marine Corps and Navy personnel, making women’s health essential to force readiness. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Michelle Reif)

Women comprise more than 16 percent of U.S. Navy, and 6 percent of Marine Corps personnel respectively

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Air Force, Army team save lives at the DoD’s only Level 1 trauma center

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10/11/2016
Air Force Capt. (Dr.) Kjell Ballard, emergency room resident, asks a patient to make the OK sign to check mobility of the fingers at the San Antonio Military Medical Center on Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston, Texas. Serving 20 counties in the Texas region, the SAMMC Emergency Department treats roughly 200 patients a day. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Kevin Iinuma)

As the only Level 1 Trauma Center in the Defense Department, the medical facility is equipped and staffed to provide care for patients suffering from major traumatic injuries

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What the experts want you to know about the HPV vaccine

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10/6/2016
About 80 million people are infected with HPV right now in the United States. Vaccines are currently available for both males and females to help prevent the virus, which can be linked to various cancers, such as cervical cancer. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Benjamin W. Stratton)

HPV is a virus that can be linked to a range of health issues, including cervical cancer. Immunization experts are encouraging people to learn more about the vaccines that help prevent this often undetected virus

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Raise your awareness of breast cancer

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10/5/2016
Navy Lt. Cmdr. Erik Ramey, reviews a patient’s x-ray as part of a routine screening mammogram. A mammogram can often detect breast cancer long before it can be felt and usually years before physical symptoms appear. If detected early, breast cancer treatment can be less invasive and more successful.  (DoD photo illustration)

It's important women, and men, regularly check for lumps or abnormalities around their breasts

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Women can maintain good health with Well Woman visits

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10/3/2016
Navy Hospitalman Recruit Joseph Hinson, of Naval Branch Health Clinic Jacksonville, takes vital signs of Aviation Boatswain’s Mate Airman Krista Leandry during a physical exam. One of the most important things women can do to maintain good health is schedule an annual Well Woman visit with their healthcare provider. Well Woman exams help assess individual risks for women and can provide services for immunizations, contraceptives, screening for disease and counselling for sexually transmitted infections. (U.S. Navy photo by Jacob Sippel)

An annual Well Woman visit is an opportunity to detect and prevent disease

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Cochlear implant opens up the world for Army colonel

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9/22/2016
Dr. Elizabeth Searing (right) makes initial adjustments via a computer to Lt. Col. James Morrison's cochlear implant. Dr. April Luxner, an audiologist with Cochlear Corporation, was on hand to witness Morrison's reactions to hearing with his right ear after 12 years of deafness. (U.S. Army photo by Jeff Troth)

In the past 12 years, Army Lt. Col. James Morrison has seen ear, head and neck, and neurology specialists at the six posts where he was stationed

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Nurse Advice Line

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You can call the Nurse Advice Line 24/7, at no cost to you, to talk to a registered nurse who can answer your urgent care questions, help you find a doctor, schedule next-day appointments at military hospitals and clinics and more.

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Hospital's sterile-processing techs are 'Gladiators' of patient safety

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9/14/2016
Army Staff Sgt. Oscar Domino (left), operating room technician, hands a sterile pack to Army Maj. Jerry Rivera-Santiago, sterile processing's officer in charge. Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center's Sterile Processing Department assembles and packs more than 400 surgical units monthly. (U.S. Army photo by Gloria Montgomery)

Sterile-processing medical technicians are the multipliers of hospital safety who clean, disinfect and sterilize the hospital and dental clinic's surgical tools

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Air Force, Army medics train together for MEDEX 16

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8/31/2016
Army Capt. Gregory Lacy, 228th Combat Support Hospital urologist, (center), assists Army Col. George Newton, 228th CSH general surgeon, (right), while Army Spc. Marinel Armstead, 228th CSH surgical scrub technician, (left), observes during MEDEX. During the medical exercise, Soldiers integrated with Airmen to train for responding to potential real world contingency operations. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Araceli Alarcon)

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Survival rates improving for Soldiers wounded in combat, says Army surgeon general

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About 92 percent of Soldiers wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan have made it home alive. Soldiers in a tactical critical care evacuation team prepare for a patient transfer mission at Forward Operating Base Orgun East, Afghanistan. (U.S. Air Force photo by Marleah Miller)

About 92 percent of Soldiers wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan have made it home alive

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Air Force and Navy medical teams integrate at sea

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Medical personnel from the Air Force and Navy treat a simulated casualty during a mass casualty drill aboard the amphibious transport dock ship USS San Antonio. San Antonio is deployed with the Wasp Amphibious Ready Group to support maritime security operations and theater security cooperation efforts in the U.S. 5th Fleet area of operations.

Airmen from the U.S. Air Force 379th Expeditionary Medical Group (EMG), Mobile Field Surgical Team (MFST) and Expeditionary Critical Care Team (ECCT) are embarked aboard amphibious transport dock USS San Antonio.

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It's World Breastfeeding Week

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