Feed Of The Year Finalist #6: Breast Cancer Blog
27th Dec 2005, 09:03 GMT
Breast Cancer Blog Judge Dana Blankenhorn-"A really good and important blog, well written, well illustrated, unique content. Updated often. Feed is just headlines, links right back to the blog. No comments, maybe because these people say it all." "Takes a sensitive subject and handles it with thoroughness of information and beauty. Not enough information about who does the site and how to contact." -"Chief Justice" Russ . Hey, Russ still here. I'm very big on feeds, blogs and sites that provide contact info. When it comes to sites with subject matter of such critical import, author credentials info should be imperative. Betsy -our judge panel's only female says this about the otherwise excellent blog that provides info about a disease that kills more than 45,000 U.S. women (and, to be fair, 300 men) annually: Judge Betsy Richter-"Feed needs to offer at least partial post excerpts - headlines alone not adequate. No visible way to contact author; learn more about her background/credentials.." She's right- Russ. - by Russell Shaw Read About the Countdown
Feed Of The Year Finalist #6: Breast Cancer Blog related news:
- Best Steps for Healthier Breasts — iVillage Health & Well-Being News
- Breast cancer survival rate boosted by radiotherapy — News-Medical News Feed
- Aromatase inhibitor shows promise for breast cancer patients — The Cancer Blog
- Derivative Of The Sweet Wormwood Plant Shows Potential In Preventing Breast Cancer — Medical News Today RSS/XML Feed
- Wonderfully inspiring survivors — The Cancer Blog
- Breast Cancer Treatment Site Launches to Provide Centralized Information Resource for Those Facing Breast Cancer Treatments — PR Web (The Free Wire Service) Medical
- Fabulous, thoughtful gifts for female related cancers — The Cancer Blog
- Breast cancer in the era of personalised medicine — Services latest news on Laboratorytalk
- Breast cancer survey underway. — Daily New Zealand News
- Ancient Chinese remedy shows potential in preventing breast cancer — Physics Org