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Early detection of breast cancer can be the difference between life and death, but thousands of women lack the means to get a mammogram, while others fail to realize the importance of getting regular mammograms.

If you had the opportunity to donate free mammograms to low-income, inner-city and minority women who lack access to this essential service and have only a limited awareness of breast cancer, you’d do it, right?

I’m glad you said “yes,” because, thanks to The Breast Cancer Site, you can! All you have to do is take a few seconds to go to the site:

With a simple, daily click of the pink “Click Here to Give - it’s FREE” button at The Breast Cancer Site, visitors help to provide free mammograms for women in need. Visitors pay nothing. Mammograms are provided by our charitable partners. Your click is paid for by site sponsors, and mammogram funding is provided to clinics throughout the U.S. through the efforts of the National Breast Cancer Foundation.

Women who are fortunate enough to catch their cancer early have a five-year survival rate of more than 96%. Yet 13 million American women aged 40 and older have never had a mammogram.

The Breast Cancer Site offers us all a fast, free way to literally help save lives, and you can help even more when you shop in The Breast Cancer Site store:

With each item purchased, shoppers generate funds that provide free mammograms for women in need. The store offers a wide array of items to show your support as well as fair-traded and handcrafted items from around the world that help families and communities pull themselves out of poverty.

Find out more about the need for early detection and how the Breast Cancer Site is saving lives here.

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One Response to “Lift A Finger To Save A Woman’s Life”

  1. How can we continue this way of life when it is killing us, starting with the very youngest, now that cancers are rampant?
    Wouldn’t it be nice if money went to stopping it before it went to prolonging lives.
    But how can we shut down cancer producers if they run our economy?
    So much to think about.

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