The New Generation Breast Cancer Book The New Generation Breast Cancer Book

The New Generation Breast Cancer Book

How to Navigate Your Diagnosis and Treatment Options-and Remain Optimistic-in an Age of Information Overload

    • 4.0 • 6 Ratings
    • $10.99
    • $10.99

Publisher Description

From an expert in the field comes the definitive guide to managing breast cancer in the information age—a comprehensive resource for diagnosis, treatment, and peace of mind.
 
The breast cancer cure rate is at an all-time high, and so is the information, to say nothing of the misinformation, available to patients and their families. Online searches can lead to unreliable sources, leaving even the most resilient patient feeling uneasy and uncertain about her diagnosis, treatment options, doctors, side effects, and recovery. Adding to a patient’s anxiety is input from well-meaning friends and family, with stories, worries, and opinions to share, sometimes without knowing the details of her particular case, when in reality breast cancer treatment has gone well beyond a “one size fits all” approach. Elisa Port, MD, FACS, chief of breast surgery at The Mount Sinai Hospital and co-director of the Dubin Breast Center in Manhattan, offers an optimistic antidote to the ocean of Web data on screening, diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment. Inside you’ll discover
 
• the various scenarios when mammograms indicate the need for a biopsy
• the questions to ask about surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, and breast reconstruction
• the important things to look for when deciding where to get care
• the key to deciphering complicated pathology reports and avoiding confusion
• the facts on genetic testing and the breast cancer genes: BRCA-1 and BRCA-2
• the best resources and advice for those supporting someone with breast cancer
 
From innovations in breast cancer screening and evaluating results to post-treatment medications and living as a breast cancer survivor, Dr. Elisa Port describes every possible test and every type of doctor visit, providing a comprehensive, empathetic guide that every newly diagnosed woman (and her family) will want to have at her side.

Praise for The New Generation Breast Cancer Book
 
“One book you need . . . If you’re considering your options for treatment or know someone who is, this step-by-step guide, The New Generation Breast Cancer Book, is essential reading.”InStyle

“Elisa Port, M.D., is the doctor every patient deserves: brilliant and compassionate. Her book will be a sanity saver and, quite possibly, a life saver.”—Geralyn Lucas, author of Why I Wore Lipstick to My Mastectomy
 
“As up-to-date as one can get, with lots to offer people facing a cancer diagnosis or hoping to support someone with the disease.”Library Journal (starred review)

The New Generation Breast Cancer Book helps you sort through all the information you’ve gathered, clarify the terminology, consider the options, and make the right decisions for your unique case.”—Edie Falco
 
“A lifeline for many women in need of today’s most up-to-date choices for treatment . . . Everyone should read this book for themselves, their mothers, grandmothers, daughters, and friends.”—Kara DioGuardi, Grammy-nominated songwriter, music executive, and Arthouse Entertainment co-founder

“The book is teeming with easy-to-understand medical explanations, tips, takeaways, and pro-and-con discussions of various courses of action. Port also includes two extremely useful appendices that respectively take on common myths and answer questions frequently asked by friends and family. This is a vital read that will empower men and women alike.”Publishers Weekly

GENRE
Health, Mind & Body
RELEASED
2015
September 22
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
320
Pages
PUBLISHER
Random House Publishing Group
SELLER
Penguin Random House LLC
SIZE
3.1
MB

Customer Reviews

Adameus ,

A blend of help and unfair bias

Truly, I purchased this book anxious to read what Dr. Port had to say for my very patients. I am a general surgeon, in practice for over 20 years. I trained in a brisk breast cancer involved setting. The number one diagnosis in my practice is breast cancer. However, I am also performing gallbladder surgery, appendectomies, hernia repairs and the full spectrum of “general surgery” procedures. I give patients all the time they deserve and expect when they are faced with a breast cancer diagnosis. I help them build their team and have an ample network of specialists to support their individual circumstances for their particular cancer. I attend breast meetings, read the literature and have weekly meetings with my oncology colleagues. Dr. Port’s clear bias against utilizing general surgeons should have been balanced against the clear possibility that a “Breast Cancer Specialist” may not be a good provider. It is important that patients understand the word “physician” means ‘teacher’. Whatever a surgeon’s background, a patient must feel educated, involved and empowered to make difficult choices based on quality direction.