Help For Cancer Patients

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Well-Being Help For CancerPatients (NAPSA)—Scientists have discovered new ways to help people combatting cancer handle one of the worst impediments to getting the treatment they need. The problem, according to the Journal of Oncology Management, is nausea, an often uncomfortable side effect of chemotherapy. In fact, it can be so bad that it can keep patients from eating properly, which drains their strength when they need it to fight the disease. In some cases, it even discourages peo- ple from continuing the treatments. eg L Fo Two convenient, noninvasive nausea treatments may makea big difference in cancerpatients’lives. The U.S. National Institutes of Health found acupuncture can relieve nausea, aS can noninvasive acupressure. People nause- ated by chemotherapy, motion sickness or other causes can wear acupressure wristbands called Sea- Bands, each with a plastic button that presses gently on the wrist. Another answer maybe fastacting, great-tasting Anti-Nausea Ginger Gum. A study at the University of Exeter in Britain found a significant reduction in nausea in leukemia patients who took cinger. Both are available at drugstores and supermarkets or at www.seaband.com.