Friday 13 May 2016

Enormous "Frog Penis" That Went Viral Isn't A Penis At All.


photo credit: a Tad Pole. Keith Leech/Facebook2.8K
A set of photographs that appear to show a well-endowed frog have been stunning people and flustering lady-frogs all over the Internet. Who can blame them? Just look at the size of this thing.
The images emerged last week from a man in Victoria, Australia, who seems to have found the frog in his garden.
However, as any frog sex enthusiast will tell you, frogs don't have penises. Most frog species mate in a process called amplexus, where fertilization of eggs occurs outside the body.
As Gerry Marantelli from the Australian Amphibian Research Centre told BuzzFeed News, this impressive piece of manhood is most likely to be an "extra partially formed leg." Yep, it's literally a "third leg."
Gerry added: “It’s not a penis, frogs don’t have them, but penises did evolve from ‘legs’ during embryonic development so an extra leg is part way there. Amphibians in one way likely invented the penis (albeit not the modern one).”
But don’t feel too sorry for frogs. Like many species of birds, reptiles, and other amphibians, frogs have a cloaca. This organ, which can be found in both females and males, acts as passage for waste and sperm or eggs (on a offbeat side note, some turtlescan even breath out of them). The males of the tailed frog species actually have an extended reproductive tract that it uses to funnel sperm. So, if you're still keen to see some frog reproductive organs, check out the tailed frog in all its humble glory:
image credit: Mokele/Wikimedia Commons. (CC BY-SA 3.0)

Hyundai is building a real-life Iron Man suit.

hyundai-wearable-robot.jpg
Hyundai's robot suits, for all your door-moving needs.
Hyundai
You're not going to be able to pick one up off the rack at Macy's and head out to fight the Mandarin in it, but Iron Man-style wearable robot suits are coming.
     Korean car company Hyundai this weekshowed off photos of a dark blue robotic exoskeleton. No date was given for the suit's release, and in fact, Hyundai didn't provide much information at all. The suit is only a prototype, but the photos and projected uses are pretty cool.
     The company said the suit could help factory workers carry heavy items, help soldiers move quickly in their full gear, and may assist people with disabilities to become more mobile. One photo shows a man wearing a partial suit that helps him move his legs up a flight of stairs.
     The suit has none of Tony Stark's sass and style, but if face-huggers ever attack, this may be the suit to get. One image shows a man wearing a suit similar to the one Sigourney Weaver's Ripley wore in "Aliens" when she set out to save little Newt from the queen alien. We mostly build cars at night. Mostly.
You won't be seeing Iron Man suits on the cover of Vogue, but they're as in style as it's possible for them to be right now. Even the Power Rangers will be wearing Iron Man-style duds in their 2017 movie.

Google's Chirp May Try to Drown Out Amazon's Echo


google-onhub-wifi-router

       Google is rumored to be developing a direct competitor to Amazon's Echo, code-named "Chirp." The device, which might resemble the OnHub router (pictured above), would incorporate its Google Now voice assistant technology.
Google likely will launch the product later this year, according to a Wednesday Recode article that debunked earlier reports suggesting Google would launch the new system at its annual I/Odeveloper conference next week.
Google likely will preview the system at I/O, as well as reveal some of its emerging technology in the virtual reality market, Recode said.

Echo's Success

The Echo has been one of Amazon's biggest product launches in years. It combines a speaker with the Alexa personal digital assistant -- voice recognition software that answers questions, sounds alerts, maintains lists, reorders Amazon Prime products, plays music, and controls compatible door locks, lights and other home automation systems, among other things.
Amazon has sold more than 3 million Echo units since the product's launch in late 2014, Consumer Intelligence Research Partners reported last month.
Consumers are using the Echo for many different purposes, according to CIRP's research, with more using it to stream music and answer questions than to control home utilities and security.
Google has substantial experience in integrating its hardware and software, noted Michael Levin, cofounder of CIRP.
However, even if it does bring the rumored product to fruition, Amazon will not roll over and cede any ground, he added.
"Amazon is a smart, determined competitor in many spaces and defends its products energetically," Levin told TechNewsWorld.
Although the rumor seems credible, it's not likely that Google is going to raise the bar with the introduction of an Echo competitor, maintained Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group.
"They really haven't been all that successful with new products, so I doubt [Amazon CEO Jeff] Bezos is staying up late worrying about their offering," he told TechNewsWorld.
That said, "I agree much of the future of in-home IoT will likely be tied to something like Echo," Enderle continued, "and I'm kind of surprised that we haven't heard of an Apple offering yet."

Integrating Hardware With Search

Google's product likely will function as a complementary hardware device to Google's search engine and other service-oriented apps, such as maps and business solutions, said Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT.
"If customers queried a Chirp device about pizza delivery, they might be steered towards Google clients or restaurants highly rated by Google users.

Zuckerberg: Facebook investigating censorship claim.

Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg has said the company is investigating claims it censored news reports with conservative viewpoints.
It follows a week of allegations in the media and discussion in the US Senate.
The tech news website Gizmodo had saidFacebook staff suppressed articles on conservative topics from the site's "trending" news section and "injected" others, even if they were not trending.
Mr Zuckerberg said Facebook had found no evidence the report was correct.
"Facebook stands for giving everyone a voice," he wrote in a post.
"This week, there was a report suggesting that Facebook contractors working on Trending Topics suppressed stories with conservative viewpoints. We take this report very seriously and are conducting a full investigation to ensure our teams upheld the integrity of this product."
He said if any evidence of "anything against our principles" was discovered "you have my commitment that we will take additional steps to address it".
Mr Zuckerberg said he was inviting leading conservatives to meet him to discuss their views.
Image copyrigh
Image captionFacebook co-sponsored the Republican presidential debates
Gizmodo's original report alleged that staff tampered with trending topic stories and were told to include stories published by the BBC, CNN and other mainstream news organisations ahead of smaller news sites.
It said the trending topics section was run like a newsroom, with curators able to "blacklist" or "inject" topics.
The report was followed by a release of documents to The Guardian, which appeared to show editorial decision-making by Facebook staff, alongside the company's algorithm, to determine what is trending.
Stories pulled from mainstream news organisations by the editorial team are called "external" topics, the documents say, and are gathered via feeds from 1,000 media sources.
These sources include the BBC, Reuters and many national newspapers, as well as smaller popular sites.
Media captionThe BBC's Dave Lee reports from outside the Facebook headquarters in California
The criteria for marking a story as having "national" importance required that it be the lead on at least five of 10 websites: the BBC, CNN, Fox News, The Guardian, NBC, New York Times, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Yahoo News or Yahoo.
Blacklist tools, the documents say, were only to be used for two reasons: where a story did not relate to something that actually happened, or where a story was duplicated.
Facebook had been coming under increasing pressure to make its processes more transparent before the release of documents to The Guardian.
Republican Senator John Thune, chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, asked if the company was misleading the public about its news features.
"Social networks such as Facebook are an increasingly important source of news for many Americans and people around the world," he said.

Panettiere Seeks Postpartum Depression Help Again



Actress Hayden Panettiere is seeking treatment again for the postpartum depression she has talked openly about since the birth of her daughter.
The star asked her fans to "wish me luck" as she revealed the news on Twitter and Instagram.
Panettiere, 26, gave birth to Kaya, her first child with professional boxer Wladimir Klitschko in December 2014.
In a statement she said: "The postpartum depression I have been experiencing has impacted every aspect of my life.
"Rather than stay stuck due to unhealthy coping mechanisms I have chosen to take time to reflect holistically on my health and life. Wish me luck!"
Hayden Panettiere (L)  and Wladimir Klitschko
Her announcement came after US television network ABC announced her series Nashville was being cancelled after four seasons.
Last October a spokeswoman for Panettiere confirmed she was voluntarily seeking professional help at a treatment centre.
It came after she said in an interview that the condition needs to be talked about more.
"Women need to know that they're not alone, and that it does heal," she told Live! With Kelly and Michael, a WABC-TV talk show.
She said there was a misconception that postpartum depression is a made-up condition.
"It's something that's completely uncontrollable," the New York-born actress said.
"It's really painful and it's really scary and women need a lot of support."

Why Manchester united must qualify for champions league.

 Man Utd must qualify for Champions League 
        Manchester United will lose at least £30million if they fail to qualify for the Champions League  –
        Manchester City are two points ahead of United with just one more game to play this season  Manchester United’s possible failure to qualify for the Champions League next season could have a damaging impact on the incoming revenue for the club.  
         Assistant Ryan Gigg and Manager Louis van Gaal of Manchester United look on during a Premier League match between United and Sunderland. For starters, United will lose over £30million in broadcast revenue for failing to qualify for the Champions League while that there will be a 30 per cent cut in the Adidas deal. The Red Devils sit in fifth position in the Premier League going into Sunday’s final round of fixture, two points adrift of rivals Manchester City. However, the Blues’ far superior goal difference means they only need a point at Swansea to secure fourth spot, while United must rely on the Welsh side causing an upset, while beating Bournemouth at Old Trafford.

7 ways to stop sweaty hand.

Is it finally time to stop sweaty palms from ruining your life? Having sweaty palms is so embarrassing! If you always find yourself hiding your hands in public, or trying to find something to wipe them on, then you may have palmar hyperhidrosis. Ever ask yourselfwhy are my hands sweaty all the time? I certainly used to. While not a common condition, it’s not rare either. In fact, millions of people around the world suffer from sweaty palms. Is it possible to prevent your sweating hands from getting all wet in public?
Yes! There is a sweaty palms remedy or two you can try. Before you start dishing out money for expensive medical treatments, you can try some home remedies to stop sweaty palms. At least one of these should work for you. Everyone is different, so what works for once person won’t always work for another. Still, these are great starting points for how to help sweating.

Finding Success Step by Step

Feel free to jump around throughout this page. The important thing to remember is that it’s crucial you give each of these remedies time to sink in and go to work on your specific palm sweating problem. Have some patience and give any remedy you attempt at least 7 days to feel maximum results for when you sweat too much.
1. Before You Begin2. Great Home Remedies3. Avoid Certain Foods4. Video Tutorials

Great Home Remedies to Stop Sweaty Palms

Home remedies for sweaty palms are eay to do and take the right kind of attitude to execute well. You’re looking to find a routine or regimen that you can live with – something realistic.
So, as you follow along below, try to think about doing implementing the particular strategy on a schedule (like once a week) to maintain your progress.
It’s important also to have realistic expectations. Your sweating will never be 100% gone. Instead think of it as keeping it at bay while using treatments that minimize it (and very well at that).
I recommend you try them all out and combine the ones that have an effect in a “stacking” strategy. I’ll talk more about stacking later on. For now get started with the initial treatments to add to your stop sweaty palms arsenal.

Quick Word Before We Begin Treating Your Sweaty Hands:

Just a quick reminder. With any of these methods to stop sweaty palms, you want to be sure you’re using common sense. If you experience any type of discomfort or irritablility, make sure you consult with a Dermatologist for additional consultation. Not trying to scare you here but some of the home remedies may not suit your specific sweating issues. So, start slow and once you find something that works great, continue from there.
Try a Baking Soda Soak
Baking soda is a good remedy for palmar hyperhidrosis. Mix some baking soda with warm water and dip your hands into the mixture for fifteen minutes or so. Baking soda is an alkali which can dry the skin enough to prevent sweat from coming out.
In effective it evaporates your sweat.
While your hands are soaking, try to grab the baking soda that settles into the bottom of the pan or bowl. Move it between your fingers and palms. It emphasizes the result.
You should expect to have dry hands for at least the first half hour after performing this treatment the first time. As you start out, you’ll want to proceed every day for 5 days straight. Each day you’ll notice that your hands stay drier longer and longer – until you start reaching the hour mark. From there, you need to have a foundation of some other treatments to stay dry longterm.
The baking soda solution to stop sweaty palms works well as a short-term fix remedy.
If you’ve got a hot date or an interview and you want to minimize your sweating. Or, if you’re already using other sweat fighting treatments and you’re looking to amp it up a bit.
The baking soda treatment to stop sweaty palms is a great supplementary choice.
Tomato Juice Can Help
Another remedy to try is tomato juice. The active ingredients can cool down the body temperature. When the body is nice and cool, it won’t sweat so much. Drink tomato juice every day keep your internal body temperature down.
You can also soak your hands in it for a few minutes a day. The high levels of sodium will keep hands dry (much like salt water) for a significant of time if scaled up much like the Baking Soda Soaks mentioned above.
Be wary of a rash from the high acidity levels in the juice. Although this is a big factor which contributes to the effectiveness of the treatment, it can also be the tipping point into irritation.
Sage Tea
Don’t like tomato juice? Drink a cup of sage tea a few times a week.
It’s very strong, so you don’t have to drink it every day. Two cups, three or four days a week should be enough.
Steep several leaves in hot water for fifteen minutes and then add some flavor such as honey or orange peel.
The Sage Tea Soak
You can also soak your hands in a sage tea solution. Steep 5 bags of tea in a bowl filled with warm water. Soak your hands for 15 minutes.
Sage Tea works particularly well to stop sweaty palms due to its high levels of Tannic Acid. Tannin, a substance found in all tea contains this natural astringent. It goes to work by drying the skin and keeping it soft, smooth and pleasant smelling.
If you find that soaking your hands in Sage Tea gives them a bit of a tan, don’t worry. The residue washes off easily enough with soap and water. This is a treatment that many people swear by. It definitely takes a bit of effort but the results are worth it.
Apple Cider Vinegar
Apple cider vinegar is a good solution for hand sweating. Pour some in a pot and soak your hands in the mixture for fifteen minutes. White vinegar is the best choice, since it’s such a strong astringent.
A natural astringent can keep your sweating hands dry.
In addition to soaking your hands in a mixture of apple cider and vinegar, you can drink apple cider to prevent hyperhidrosis.
Herbal Remedies
Don’t overlook herbal remedies, especially those that can help calm your nerves. Anxiety is one of the biggest triggers for sweaty palms, so staying calm will help your hands stay dry. Some herbal remedies that are believed to calm anxietyinclude St. John’s Wort, Chamomile, Kava Kava, Neem Seed, and Valerian.
Be sure to consult with your doctor before engaging in regular routine of any herbal supplement.
These are relatively safe but without knowing your sensativity level to certain herbs, I do recommend you let your primary care physician know you’re taking any of them.
Photo Credit:

Avoid Certain Foods To Stop Hand Sweating

• Stay away from these: garlic, fish, onions, peppers, and any other spicy foods. These foods make the sweating and odor worse. You should also avoid junk food since it contains a lot of toxins. Your body will sweat more in order to get rid of all of the toxins.
• Stay away from stimulants such as caffeinated drinks and energy pills. They will raise your metabolic rate, which will in turn cause you to sweat more. The idea is to keep your nervous system relaxed and not stimulated. Stimulated nerves can trigger the sweat glands. Drink tons and tons of water throughout the day.

Your Stay-Strong Plan.

        Nobody expects to break a bone. As we race through our happily hectic days, we take for granted the 206 bones in our skeletons. But when one snaps, everything changes. A break may mean doctors' appointments, x-rays, a cast, or even surgery, physical therapy, and months of limited mobility. And if you're over 40, you may also worry that this fracture will be just the first of many to come.
        What you fear is osteoporosis, the disease that leaves bones brittle and prone to fractures. It often occurs in the first few years after menopause, when bone loss accelerates due to dropping estrogen levels. A matrix of minerals, bone is constantly broken down and rebuilt by the body at a microscopic level: If the breakdown consistently exceeds the buildup, bones lose density.
Eight million women and 2 million men age 50 and older have osteoporosis, and some 34 million more Americans have osteopenia, a stage of bone decline that occurs before full-blown osteoporosis.
But even in midlife and beyond, women can still prevent bone disease. Read on forPrevention's bone-protection plan.
Stay Stronger Longer
        The most effective way to protect your bones is to make sure you're getting enough calcium, vitamin D, and protein, whether it's through food or with the help of supplements. Even though you reach your bone-building peak around age 30, getting the right amounts of these key nutrients throughout your life is crucial to keeping your skeleton healthy. Here's the latest expert advice on where to start.
Calcium
What you need: 1,000 mg a day for women ages 19 to 50; 1,200 mg for those over 50, per the Institute of Medicine (IOM). This mineral is the single most important component in building and maintaining bone density.
Where to get it: Dairy products—especially fat-free or low-fat milk and yogurt—are excellent sources and account for about 72% of Americans' calcium intake. (If you're lactose intolerant, lactose-free products provide calcium too.) Other great sources include canned sardines and salmon, calcium-fortified orange juice and dry breakfast cereals, Cheddar cheese, and tofu (if prepared with calcium sulfate). Check out this handy chart of the beat food source of calcium. 
Supplemental sources: Your body can handle only about 500 to 600 mg of calcium in one 6-to 8-hour period and absorbs only about 30% of that. If you consume only 1 or 2 cups of milk and/or yogurt daily, you'll come closer to meeting your daily requirements if you also take a daily supplement that provides 500 mg of calcium citrate or 600 mg of calcium carbonate, according to Ethel Siris, MD, director of the osteoporosis Calcium carbonate should be taken with meals for best absorption, but calcium citrate can be taken at any time of day.
Can you take too much? While it's not a common problem, the IOM warns against consuming too much calcium. At elevated levels, the mineral can cause kidney stone and was linked in one major study to a slightly heightened risk of heart attack. It's not connected, however, with the "calcifications" that may turn up on mammograms. The IOM sets the upper limit of safety for women over 50 at 2,000 mg of calcium a day.[pagebreak]
Vitamin D
What you need: 600 IU daily for people ages 1 to 70; 800 IU above age 70, according to the IOM
Where to get it: You can't absorb calcium without vitamin D, which can sometimes be found in the same sources, such as dairy products (a glass of vitamin D-fortified milk has about 120 IU). Additionally, it's in fatty fish such as salmon and mackerel, egg yolks, and D-fortified breakfast cereals. Vitamin D is also synthesized by the skin when sunlight touches it, but if you use sunscreen, have very dark skin, or live in a cloudy climate, you may be limited in how much your body can manufacture.
Supplemental sources: A blood test can confirm if you're not getting enough D. If you need more, Dr. Siris recommends a supplement with 400 IU of vitamin D (as cholecalciferol).
Can you take too much? The IOM also sets an upper limit (4,000 IU daily) forvitamin D, but it's best to stay well under that. Unless you're diagnosed with a severe deficiency, avoid supplements greater than 1,000 units a day. 
Protein
What you need: Up to 77 g a day for a woman who weighs about 154 pounds, according to a 2010 multiuniversity study published in Aging Health. While the RDA for a woman of this weight is 56 g, the research suggests that another 21 g a day can improve bone strength. When you increase dietary protein, you increase calcium absorption and a natural growth factor called IGF-1, which is important for bone formation.
Where to get it: Poultry, lean meats, fish, beans, tofu, and fat-free or low-fat dairy products all pack protein. For a sense of how much: Three ounces of cooked beef has about 28 g of protein, 3 ounces of sardines has 21 g, a cup of lentils has 18 g, and a cup of yogurt has 14 g.

Power Foods For Bone Health
Here are some easy ways to get the key bone-protecting nutrients:
Protein
Cheese includes both calcium and protein
3 ounces of fish can pack in a full 21 g of protein
Calcium
        Tofu prepared with calcium sulfate is a good nondairy source of the mineral
8 ounces of fat-free plain yogurt has 452 mg of calcium
Orange juice is often fortified with calcium
A cup of low-fat milk provides 305 mg of calcium
Vitamin D
An egg yolk contains 10% of your dailyvitamin D
Some cereals are enriched with both calcium and vitamin D
[pagebreak]
Your Density Destiny
        The gold standard for assessing bone health is a test called DXA (for dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry). The completely painless 10-minute scan typically measures bone-mineral density in the hip and lower spine.
Many women can wait until 65 to have the procedure, according to Sundeep Khosla, MD, a bone specialist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN, and there's no need for most women to get a baseline test prior tomenopause, he says. But if you're at high risk, you should get the test sooner—within 3 years of menopause, at the latest.
The scoring for the test is based on the average bone density of a 30-year-old woman, whose T-score, as it's called, is zero. If your T-score falls between-1 and-2.5, your diagnosis will be osteopenia, which you should take as a wake-up call to do all you can to preserve your bones and try to prevent the development of osteoporosis. If your score is-2.6 or lower, you're considered to have full-blown osteoporosis.

Are You At Risk For Osteoporosis?
Everyone's odds of osteoporosis increase with age: The older you get, the more likely you are to develop the disease. But many other factors can also affect your chances—and some of them are within your power to change. Below, some of the most common contributors to osteoporosis risk:
  • You have a family history of osteoporosis (among men or women on either side).
  • You've already had a low-impact fracture (a break caused by only a mild trauma).
  • You were treated for at least 3 months at any point in your life with oral steroids (which weaken bones).
  • You've got a bone-robbing disease such as rheumatoid arthritis.
  • You had an early or abrupt menopause(which can result from chemotherapy or removal of ovaries), lowering your estrogen levels.
  • You consume too much caffeine (more than 375 mg, or about 4 cups of coffee a day), salt (more than 2,300 mg daily), or alcohol (more than one drink for women per day; more than two per day for men).
  • You smoke.

20 Ways To Never Get Cancer

Try these novel strategies and your risk ofcancer could dwindle even more.
1. Filter your tap water
You'll reduce your exposure to known or suspected carcinogens and hormone-disrupting chemicals. A report from the President's Cancer Panel on how to reduce exposure to carcinogens suggests that home-filtered tap water is a safer bet than bottled water, whose quality often is not higher—and in some cases is worse—than that of municipal sources, according to a study by the Environmental Working Group. (Consumer Reports' top picks for faucet-mounted filters: Culligan, Pur Vertical, and the Brita OPFF-100.) Store water in stainless steel or glass to avoid chemical contaminants such as BPA that can leach from plastic bottles.
2. Stop topping your tank
So say the EPA and the President's CancerPanel: Pumping one last squirt of gas into your car after the nozzle clicks off can spill fuel and foil the pump's vapor recovery system, designed to keep toxic chemicals such as cancer-causing benzene out of the air, where they can come in contact with your skin or get into your lungs.
3. Marinate meat first
Processed, charred, and well-done meats can contain cancer-causing heterocyclic amines, which form when meat is seared at high temperatures, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, which get into food when it's charcoal broiled. "The recommendation to cut down on grilled meat has really solid scientific evidence behind it," says Cheryl Lyn Walker, PhD, a professor of carcinogenesis at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson CancerCenter. If you do grill, add rosemary and thyme to your favorite marinade and soak meat for at least an hour before cooking. The antioxidant-rich spices can cut HCAs by as much as 87%, according to research at Kansas State University.
4. Caffeinate every day
Java lovers who drank 5 or more cups of caffeinated coffee a day had a 40% decreased risk of brain cancer, compared with people who drank the least, in a 2010 British study. A 5-cup-a-day coffee habit reduces risks of oral and throat canceralmost as much. Researchers credit the caffeine: Decaf had no comparable effect. But coffee was a more potent protector against these cancers than tea, which the British researchers said also offered protection against brain cancer.
5. Water down your risk
Drinking plenty of water and other liquids may reduce the risk of bladder cancer by diluting the concentration of cancer-causing agents in urine and helping to flush them through the bladder faster. Drink at least 8 cups of liquid a day, suggests the American Cancer Society.
6. Load up on green greens
Next time you're choosing salad fixings, reach for the darkest varieties. The chlorophyll that gives them their color is loaded with magnesium, which some large studies have found lowers the risk of coloncancer in women. "Magnesium affects signaling in cells, and without the right amount, cells may do things like divide and replicate when they shouldn't," says Walker. Just 1/2 cup of cooked spinach provides 75 mg of magnesium, 20% of the daily value.
7. Snack on Brazil nuts
They're a stellar source of selenium, an antioxidant that lowers the risk of bladdercancer in women, according to research from Dartmouth Medical School. Other studies have found that people with high blood levels of selenium have lower rates of dying of lung cancer and colorectalcancer. Researchers think selenium not only protects cells from free radical damage but also may enhance immune function and suppress formation of blood vessels that nourish tumors.
8. Burn off your risk
Moderate exercise such as brisk walking 2 hours a week cuts risk of breast cancer18%. Regular workouts may lower your risks by helping you burn fat, which otherwise produces its own estrogen, a known contributor to breast cancer. 
9. Skip the dry cleaner
A solvent known as perc (short forperchloroethylene) that's used in traditional dry cleaning may cause liver and kidney cancers and leukemia, according to an EPA finding backed in early 2010 by the National Academies of Science. The main dangers are to workers who handle chemicals or treated clothes using older machines, although experts have not concluded that consumers are also at increased cancer risk. Less toxic alternatives: Hand-wash clothes with mild soap and air-dry them, spot cleaning if necessary with white vinegar.
10. Ask about breast density
Women whose mammograms have revealed breast density readings of 75% or more have a breast cancer risk 4 to 5 times higher than that of women with low density scores, according to recent research. One theory is that denser breasts result from higher levels of estrogen—making exercise particularly important (see #8). "Shrinking your body fat also changes growth factors, signaling proteins such as adipokines and hormones like insulin in ways that tend to turn off cancer-promoting processes in cells," Walker says.
11. Head off cell phone risks
Use your cell phone only for short calls or texts, or use a hands-free device that keeps the phone—and the radio frequency energy it emits—away from your head. The point is more to preempt any risk than to protect against a proven danger: Evidence that cell phones increase braincancer risk is "neither consistent nor conclusive," says the President's CancerPanel report. But a number of review studies suggest there's a link.
12. Block cancer with color
Choosing your outdoor outfit wisely may help protect against skin cancer, say Spanish scientists. In their research, blue and red fabrics offered significantly better protection against the sun's UV rays than white and yellow ones did. Don't forget to put on a hat: Though melanoma can appear anywhere on the body, it's more common in areas the sun hits, and researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have found that people with melanomas on the scalp or neck die at almost twice the rate of people with the cancer on other areas of the body.
13. Pick a doc with a past
Experience—lots of it—is critical when it comes to accurately reading mammograms. A study from the University of California, San Francisco, found that doctors with at least 25 years' experience were more accurate at interpreting images and less likely to give false positives. Ask about your radiologist's track record. If she is freshly minted or doesn't check a high volume of mammograms, get a second read from someone with more mileage.
14. Eat clean foods
The President's Cancer Panel recommends buying meat free of antibiotics and added hormones, which are suspected of causing endocrine problems, including cancer. The report also advises that you purchase produce grown without pesticides and wash conventionally grown food thoroughly to remove residues. (The foods with the most pesticides: celery, peaches, strawberries, apples, and blueberries. "At least 40 known carcinogens are found in pesticides and we should absolutely try to reduce exposure," Sellers says.
15. Do a folic acid check
The B vitamin, essential for women who may become or are pregnant to prevent birth defects, is a double-edged sword when it comes to cancer risk. Consuming too much of the synthetic form (not folate, found in leafy green veggies, orange juice, and other foods) has been linked to increased colon cancer risk, as well as higher lung cancer and prostate cancerrisks. Rethink your multivitamin, especially if you eat a lot of cereal and fortified foods. A CDC study discovered that half of supplement users who took supplements with more than 400 mcg of folic acid exceeded 1,000 mcg per day of folic acid. Most supplements pack 400 mcg. Individual supplements (of vitamin D and calcium, for instance) may be a smarter choice for most women who aren't thinking of having kids.
16. Up your calcium intake
Milk's main claim to fame may also help protect you from colon cancer. Those who took calcium faithfully for 4 years had a 36% reduction in the development of new precancerous colon polyps 5 years after the study had ended, revealed Dartmouth Medical School researchers. (They tracked 822 people who took either 1,200 mg of calcium every day or a placebo.) Though the study was not on milk itself, you can get the same amount of calcium in three 8-ounce glasses of fat-free milk, along with an 8-ounce serving of yogurt or a 2- to 3-ounce serving of low-fat cheese daily.
17. Commit to whole grains
You know whole wheat is better for you than white bread. Here's more proof why you should switch once and for all: If you eat a lot of things with a high glycemic load—a measurement of how quickly food raises your blood sugar—you may run a higher risk of colorectal cancer than women who eat low-glycemic-load foods, found a Harvard Medical School study involving 38,000 women. The problem eats are mostly white: white bread, pasta, potatoes, and sugary pastries. The low-glycemic-load stuff comes with fiber.
18. Pay attention to pain.
If you're experiencing a bloated belly, pelvic pain, and an urgent need to urinate, see your doctor. These symptoms may signal ovarian cancer, particularly if they're severe and frequent. Women and physicians often ignore these symptoms, and that's the very reason that this disease can be deadly. When caught early, beforecancer has spread outside the ovary, the relative 5-year survival rate for ovariancancer is a jaw-dropping 90 to 95%.
19. Avoid unnecessary scans
CT scans are a great diagnostic tool, but they deliver much more radiation than x-rays and may be overused, says Barton Kamen, MD, PhD, chief medical officer for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. In fact, researchers suggest that one-third of CT scans could be unnecessary. High doses of radiation can trigger leukemia, so make sure scans are not repeated if you see multiple doctors, and ask if another test, such as an ultrasound or MRI, could substitute.
20. Drop 10 pounds
Being overweight or obese accounts for 20% of all cancer deaths among women and 14% among men, notes the AmericanCancer Society. (You're overweight if your body mass index is between 25 and 29.9; you're obese if it's 30 or more.) Plus, losing excess pounds reduces the body's production of female hormones, which may protect against breast cancer, endometrial cancer, and ovarian cancer. Even if you're not technically overweight, gaining just 10 pounds after the age of 30 increases your risk of developing breast, pancreatic, and cervical, among other cancers.