llnlln56
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I wouldn't. I have lung cancer and have been told to eat lots of protein, meat is full of protein. |
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Simmi
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I would cut back on red meats. Some people would become vegetarians; I don't think that is necessary. |
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lo_mcg
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I have had cancer, and when I was diagnosed I had been a vegan (no animal products at all) for 8 years, having been a vegetarian (no meat or fish at all) for most of my life.
As you see, not eating meat or fish didn't stop me from getting cancer and it didn't cure me either.
There is no diet or particular food that has been scientifically proven to cause, prevent, treat or cure cancer, or to affect its progress in any way. |
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inverse_mushroom_cloud
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I have cancer and the only difference is I try to use the Audobon list of "good" fish (sustainable populations and relatively healthy/uncontaminated), as well as the list recommended by Dr. Weil. I eat no "farmed" fish and very little Atlantic fish, none coastal.
For chicken, I choose only organic, Kosher, or natural (free of antibiotics/hormones) product, in that order. |
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tmierzi
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I'm a five-year cancer survivor and still eat all those foods, but eat beef only occasionally. There a lot of research that says beef is not a healthy food all around. If you do give up animal and fish, you will need to find another source of protein. |
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theoriginalquestmaker
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I have cancer and haven't given up anything. However, if it was PROVEN that giving up something would keep me from getting it again then yes. |
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tm_tech32
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If I believed it might help...yes.
Since the chances of me believing something like that are slim... no. |
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bigj
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if you have cancer there is no reason to give up anything. |
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peaches6
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Yeah, I would probably give up some things to see if that improved my quality of life. Good Luck! |
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