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Female Health | Women: Reduce Your Breast Cancer Risk

Women: Reduce Your Breast Cancer Risk

Sunshine and vitamin D may be key

Recent study results by Dr. Julia A. Knight of the Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, Canada, suggest that exposure to sunlight and dietary sources of vitamin D may be two of the best ways you can reduce your breast cancer risk.

Combining the right food with sunshine exposure can produce sufficient vitamin D levels in your body (1,000 IU per day). Here’s how:

  • Getting about 10 to 15 minutes two times per week in the sun without sunscreen and with exposed skin (face, arms, hands, or back) allows the sun’s rays to penetrate the skin and synthesize vitamin D.

  • Besides getting vitamin D from sunshine, you can also get it from specific foods—including butter, eggs, and vitamin D–fortified foods, such as milk, soy milk, orange juice, and cereals. Oily fish are an animal source of vitamin D3, such as salmon (wild caught is better for the environment), trout, tuna (not every day due to potentially high mercury levels), sardines, and mackerel.

  • Vitamin D supplements might also help, though research has not yet shown that this is as effective as sunlight and vitamin D gotten through food.

Live well and prosper

Overall healthy living may also reduce breast cancer risks.

  • Get moving—Exercise in the sunshine and outdoors if possible. Make a regular date with a friend to work in a walk or a run before work or at lunch. Do an exercise DVD or take a class. Find a way to make it fit into your schedule.

  • Watch the waist—If you are overweight, look for low-calorie foods and drinks.

  • Choose your fats wisely—Avoid trans fats and stick to good fats, such as olive oil, oily fish (salmon, trout, mackerel and others), avocados, and walnuts.

  • Get a folate fix—Get enough folic acid (400 mcg per day) to build healthy cells. In addition to supplements and multivitamins, folic acid can be found in citrus fruits and juices, green leafy vegetables, and fortified cereal.

  • Kick the habit—Avoid second-hand smoke and use over-the-counter products to help you quit smoking, such as nicotine gums, inhalers, lozenges, nasal sprays, or patches.

October 22, 2009

A health writer, columnist, and editor, Terra Wellington is well-known for her wellness lifestyle segments on television and radio, including the CBS network's "New York This Morning," "This Morning," and "Early Edition;" ABC’s "News This Morning," "Sonoran Living," "AM Northwest," and "Good Morning Texas;" NBC’s "News At Noon," and Fox's "Fox News Rising;" and the "Ask Heloise" radio show, among others. She also toured nationally, in-person from coast-to-coast on live TV for the 2004 Athens Olympics. She has also been featured in MSNBC.com, Traditional Home, Better Homes and Gardens, Women's Health and Fitness, Parenting, The Christian Science Monitor, First For Women, Woman’s Day, and The Vegetarian Times.

Copyright © 2009 Aisle7. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of the Aisle7 content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Aisle7. Healthnotes Newswire is for educational or informational purposes only, and is not intended to diagnose or provide treatment for any condition. If you have any concerns about your own health, you should always consult with a healthcare professional. Aisle7 shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. Aisle7 and the Aisle7 logo are registered trademarks of Aisle7.

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The health information contained in this site is not intended as medical advice and should not be considered a substitute for appropriate medical care. Any products mentioned in studies cited in Healthnotes articles are not necessarily endorsed by Bastyr. As with any product, consult with a natural health practitioner to discuss what may be best for you.

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