
Mediterranean diet may help reduce the risk of breast cancer: StudyBy: Devon Andre Women's Health | Wednesday, March 08, 2017 - 07:30 AMA 20-year study out of the Netherlands has found an association between following the Mediterranean diet and a decreased risk of breast cancer in postmenopausal women. Privacy PolicyResearchers concluded that if the majority of people strictly followed the Mediterranean diet, as many as 32.4 percent of ER-negative breast cancer cases could be avoided, while 2.3 percent of all breast cancer diagnoses could be avoided. Related: Olive oil enriched Mediterranean diet reduces risk of breast cancerShare this informationPeople who read this article benefited from…Related Reading:Erectile dysfunction patients on the Mediterranean diet may lower heart attack and stroke risk: StudyMediterranean diet slows cognitive decline rate, Alzheimer's disease in older adults: StudySources:https://www.wcrf-uk.org/uk/mediterranean-diet-can-help-reduce-risk-one-worst-types-breast-cancer-40 Researchers also excluded alcohol from their analysis, despite moderate intake being part of a traditional Mediterranean diet, as it is a known risk factor for breast cancer. The Mediterranean diet is mostly plant-based and emphasizes vegetables, fruits, beans, olive oil, and oily fish while limiting red meat and processed foods.
Eating a Mediterranean diet may cut risk of contracting form of breast cancer
First, the leaked documents — which the CIA hasn't officially confirmed as real — only implicate Samsung smart TVs from 2012 and 2013 running older versions of Samsung firmware (1111, 1112, 1116). Maybe the CIA came up with a way to infect smart TVs remotely, but there's no proof in the documents, which date from 2013 to 2016. Second, if you are concerned about eavesdropping via your smart TV, you can just turn off the voice recording capabilities in the TV's settings menu — it is under "Smart Features," "Voice Recognition" on Samsung TVs. That's not a bad idea, anyway, since TV manufactures have had to settle charges that they invaded customers' privacy themselves through TV sets. "We are aware of the report in question and are urgently looking into the matter."collected by :Lucy William



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