colorectal cancer โ ์ง๊ธ ๋ฌด์จ ์ผ์ด?
No one ever mentioned to Rick Rivers that his grandfather died of colorectal cancer โ until Rivers himself was diagnosed at age 31.
No one ever mentioned to Rick Rivers that his grandfather died of colorectal cancer โ until Rivers himself was diagnosed at age 31. Cancer felt like a taboo topic in his family, where diabetes, for example, was not. And especially so, because of where the cancer grew in his body. "There's a shame factor to talk about certain areas of your body and them not functioning the way that they're supposed to," says Rivers, a father of three in Williamstown, N.J. So the topic never came up, he says, even though colorectal cancer occurs more often and is more lethal among Black people like himself. Colo

