Today's WeatherThe Ghiorse Factor
Subscribe Now: Free Daily EBlast
Trending
Pro-Palestine Encampment Launches on Brown University’s Main Green—Pro-Palestine Encampment Launches on…
DEM Orders RI Recycled Metals to Conduct Testing Post-Fire—DEM Orders RI Recycled…
Creeps Hunt Kids on Social Media - Froma Harrop—Creeps Hunt Kids on…
Inside Art with Michael Rose - Art League Celebrates Work by High School Students—Inside Art with Michael…
Bryant Lacrosse Pounds Brown - Wins Ocean State Cup—Bryant Lacrosse Pounds Brown…
How Good Are the Four PC Portal Transfers? Pretty Good — Kevin Stacom—How Good Are the…
Plant City’s Original Founder Faces New Allegations of Racism and Sexism in NYT Report—Plant City's Original Founder…
Providence Place Mall $254.9M Loan “Transferred Due to Imminent Maturity Default” Says Report—Providence Place Mall $254.9M…
Most Delicious, Most Creative, and Most Instagrammable — Here’s Who Won Providence Pizza Week—Most Delicious, Most Creative,…
“Shame on You” — Protesters Call for State Officials to Take Action on RI Recycled Metals—PROTEST: “Shame on You”…
Your Email:
Your Name:
To:
Subject:
Message: From GoLocalProv by GoLocalProv Health Team: When we consider the attack of childhood cancers, striking one in 500 children, we take comfort in the evolution of aggressive treatments that now cure more than 75 percent of those children. This is good news. But what is often unrealized is the price those therapies exact. Aggressive cancer therapies may often render a child infertile. “Having a child diagnosed with cancer is a parent’s worst nightmare," says Sandra A. Carson, MD, director of the Center for Reproduction and Infertility at Women & Infants Hospital. "But juxtaposing the knowledge that your child may survive, and then may never be able to naturally have children of her own, can be heart-wrenching." Now, with a revolutionary program here in Rhode Island, this may no longer be the case. http://www.golocalprov.comhttp://beta.golocalprov.com/cutting-edge-in-ri-new-fertility-strategies-for-children-with-cancer