The Angelina Effect: TIME’s New Cover Image Revealed
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- Published on Thursday, 16 May 2013 18:58
- Written by Healthland
Angelina Jolie has never lacked for influence. When she adopted a baby from Ethiopia, inquiries at U.S. adoption agencies about other Ethiopian orphans doubled. When she named other children Vivienne or Maddox, those names shot up the popularity charts for American newborns. So this week, when a woman known for her powerfully iconic beauty announced that she had undergone an elective double mastectomy to reduce her genetically high risk of breast cancer, it was a cultural and medical earthquake — a revelation so arresting it became the subject of TIME’s newest cover story, which will be publish on TIME.com Thursday morning, before hitting newsstands on Friday (visit time.com/angelina; free for subscribers or purchase a digital pass).Jolie, by nearly universal agreement, made the right choice for her. She tested positive for the breast-cancer-related BRCA1 gene, putting the probability that she would develop the disease at a terrifying 87%; after her surgery, her doctors put that number at just 5%. But a lot of experts worry that we may overread the lessons. Genetic screening is a young science, and while we may have detected genes linked to a host of ills — Alzheimer’s disease, prostate cancer, rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, heart disease — we often do a terrible job of calculating our resulting risks. Just over one-tenth of 1% of all women carry the same BRCA mutation Jolie has, and yet doctors expect a stampede of women requesting the test. In the U.S., 36% of women who test positive opt for preventive mastectomy, but some doctors argue that regular MRIs and other screening tests may be sufficient to detect the disease, and that less radical procedures, like lumpectomies, may be sufficient to treat it if it does occur.Similar misunderstanding of risks is common in the case of prostate cancer too. The familiar PSA screening test detects blood antigens related to the disease, but levels of the marker can rise as a result of inflammation, infection and even riding a bicycle. Still, many men who test positive begin a cascade of subsequent tests and treatments that can often lead to a radical prostatectomy, sometimes with no real sign that they have the disease, or at least not a slow-growing case they could live with.Human beings are very good at worrying — it’s what keeps us alive and out of harm’s way. But we’re also good at overworrying, making irreversible decisions to reduce or avoid risks that don’t really exist at all. Jolie’s brave example can make us all smarter and help keep us all healthier — but only if we take the right lessons from it.
Angelina Jolie Reportedly Having Ovaries Removed
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- Published on Thursday, 16 May 2013 04:39
- Written by Celebrity Gossip
After recently going under the knife for a double mastectomy, Angelina Jolie is now reportedly scheduled to have her ovaries removed.According to People, the Oscar-winning actress still carries a 50-percent chance of developing ovarian cancer even after the recent surgery.Angelina’s mother, Marcia Lynne "Marcheline" Bertrand, died of ovarian cancer in 2007, which is why Miss Jolie is taking extra precautions for her health and safety.During her recent editorial for the New York Times, the 37-year-old actress explained that she “started with the breasts, as my risk of breast cancer is higher than my risk of ovarian cancer, and the surgery is more complex.” Reports continue that although the “Salt” star is still in her child-baring years, doctors suggest that she have her ovaries removed by the age of 40. Stay tuned to GossipCenter for the latest news on Angelina's health.
James Haven, on Sister's Mastectomy: "She Makes a Difference in Our World"
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- Published on Monday, 27 May 2013 17:39
- Written by E online
In times of crisis, family is everything.Which is why it's no surprise that Angelina Jolie's brother James Haven is speaking out exclusively to E! about his sister's decision to have a double mastectomy."There is no question Angelina makes a difference in our world by bringing awareness to so many causes," he tells E! in an exclusive statement. "Her compassion for humanity alone always makes me honored to call her my sister."In keeping with Jolie's legacy of service, James and Angelina are currently working on a film together called Court of Conscience. James is directing and Angelina is producing.The film is a huge priority for the siblings who want to make an impact on current laws about child advocacy and helping to change laws at a state and local level.Court of Conscience is clearly a labor of love for Haven, founder of the CoreCause Foundation, an organization whose sensibility clearly informs the film. "The fundamental belief of CoreCause is to focus on a preventative rather than recovery stand point. Most of the worlds crises are the effects of a 'core cause' that if addressed would solve the problem entirely."
Billy Bob Thornton Straight-Faced After Huge Angelina FLUB
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- Published on Monday, 27 May 2013 17:39
- Written by TMZ
Billy Bob Thornton should get an award for his reaction to his ex-wife Angelina Jolie undergoing a most likely lifesaving double mastectomy.Billy, who was married to Angelina from 2000 to 2003 ... said she "deserves absolutely the best in every way. She always has, she always will in my book."Watch the clip, Billy has more kind and totally appropriate words for Angie -- but it's impressive because the camera guy started out by asking ... "Have you talked to Angie since the double vasectomy?"An honest mistake, but still ... kudos to Billy.
Jon Voight first heard of her double mastectomy online
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- Published on Thursday, 16 May 2013 04:27
- Written by Independant
Angelina Jolie’s father Jon Voight revealed he first found out about his daughter’s double mastectomy by reading her article about the decision in the New York Times.Voight, who was reconciled with his daughter in 2011 after a ten-year feud, said he was “surprised as anyone and deeply moved by the way she’s handled this”.“My love and admiration for my daughter can’t be explained in words. I saw her two days ago with my son Jamie. We all got together for his birthday with her and Brad [Pitt]. But I didn’t know. It wasn’t obvious at all,” the veteran actor told the New York Daily News.Voight said he “absolutely” respected Jolie’s decision to keep him in the dark for three months, adding “I want the focus to be on the inspiration.”He said he spoke to his daughter after learning about the procedure but didn’t discuss the global reaction to her announcement. “She just explained to me and educated me on this stuff,” he said.Jolie revealed in an op-ed article entitled "My Medical Choice" that she decided to undergo a double mastectomy after a gene test revealed she had an 87 per cent chance of developing breast cancer, the disease that killed her mother.The actress said she had completed three months of medical procedures by the end of April, which she had so far managed to keep out of the public eye.Jolie's own mother died of breast cancer aged 56 and Jolie found that she herself had the 'faulty' BRCA1 gene, which increased her chances of getting the disease to 87 per cent, and of getting ovarian cancer to 50 per cent.
Pitt called her decision to undergo a double mastectomy “absolutely heroic”. He added: “All I want for is for her to have a long and healthy life, with myself and our children. This is a happy day for our family.”The 37-year-old Tomb Raider actress and humanitarian activist said the reason behind her decision was to reassure her children - of which she has three biological and three adopted - that the illness that took their grandmother would not do the same to her.In the article, she wrote: ”I can tell my children that they don’t need to fear they will lose me to breast cancer. It is reassuring that they see nothing that makes them uncomfortable.“They can see my small scars and that’s it. Everything else is just Mommy, the same as she always was.“She also thanked Pitt, describing him as ”so loving and supportive“.Following her surgery, which involved breast reconstruction with implants, the actress' chance of developing the cancer has dropped to under 5 per cent.She says her decision to write about her experience came from wanting to reassure other women that they ”have options“.”I choose not to keep my story private because there are many women who do not know that they might be living under the shadow of cancer,“ she said.