How Exercise Reduces Your Cancer Risk
Regular physical activity is linked to reduced risk for at least 13 cancer types. Here is what the research shows and how to build habits that actually protect you.
Regular physical activity is linked to reduced risk for at least 13 cancer types. Here is what the research shows and how to build habits that actually protect you.
Alcohol is classified as a Group 1 carcinogen linked to at least seven cancer types. Here is what the evidence says and how reducing your intake can lower your risk.
Your nightly sleep affects immunity, DNA repair, and cancer risk. Here's what the science says and how to take action.
Hypertension, or high blood pressure, affects one in eight adults aged between 20 to 40 worldwide,[1] and one in three adults between ages 40 and 59.
Inflammation is a normal response to infection or injury in the body, and is in fact a sign of the body working hard to heal itself.
Uterine cancer is the most common gynecologic cancer. Learn how hormonal factors, BMI, and reproductive history shape your risk.
Kidney cancer makes up 4-5% of new diagnoses and is more common in men. Learn the risk factors and what you can do.
Ovarian cancer risk is shaped by reproductive history, genetics, and lifestyle. Learn what the science says about prevention.
Bladder cancer accounts for 4% of US diagnoses. Learn the symptoms, screening options, and prevention strategies to reduce your risk.
Endocrine disrupting chemicals interfere with many basic body functions and have been linked to multiple types of cancer as well as other health problems. They are present in plastics, personal products, textiles, and even drinking water, but there are ways to reduce your exposure.
Catch shares cutting-edge science and simple actions that could change your future.
The Catch program, products, and services are intended only for maintaining and encouraging a healthy lifestyle and are not to be used for the diagnosis, cure, management, prevention, or treatment of any disease or condition. The Catch membership, products, and services should never be used for medication management or dosing decisions.