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Help us promote Australia’s first Male Breast Cancer Awareness Day

Marianne_BCNA's avatar
8 years ago



This year it is expected that 144 men will be diagnosed with breast cancer. While this is a small proportion of the total number of people diagnosed – less than 1 per cent – it’s a diagnosis that can bring very specific challenges for men.

To raise awareness that men get breast cancer too, BCNA is launching Australia’s first Male Breast Cancer Awareness Day on Friday 20 October 2017.

We are calling on our members to help us raise awareness and reduce community stigma around male breast cancer – a diagnosis that is often thought of as a “woman’s disease”.

Helping us is as easy as:

·         sharing your story about being a man with breast cancer on the online network or social media

·         following Breast Cancer Network Australia on Facebook and @BCNAPinkLady on Twitter and Instagram and sharing our posts about Male Breast Cancer Awareness Day.

More information about Male Breast Cancer Awareness Day can be found on BCNA's  latest news item on Male Breast Cancer Awareness Day.

If you’re a man with breast cancer, information to support you can be found on our Breast cancer in men page.

Thank you for getting involved with Australia’s first Male Breast Cancer Awareness Day and supporting men diagnosed with breast cancer.

-       Breast Cancer Network Australia 

Published 8 years ago
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24 Comments

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  • What a great post @traveltext. Any awareness is always a good thing. I’ll make mention of it too at the fundraiser I’m having in a couple weeks. See the post I’ve done this morning. 
  • Wonderful!! May October 20 be the start of increased awareness and increased support for
    our men.  Great post @traveltext

  • Congratulations and thanks to BCNA for creating this new day for awareness that men get this disease too.

    Because we are diagnosed later, our prognosis is poorer. Here is our manifesto:

    We ask breast cancer groups to

    •  Reduce the sexual stereotyping of breast cancer as being exclusively a female disease.

    •  Include a splash of blue among the pink to raise awareness of male breast cancer.

    •  Institute a day in October to publicise male breast cancer.

    •  Advocate for one percent of funds raised on research for male breast cancer.

    •  Advocate for a screening program for men with an hereditary predisposition to breast cancer.

    •  Provide inclusive imagery and language across all mediums to acknowledge the disease exists in men.

    •  Build a sense of importance and belonging within cancer support groups for male breast cancer patients and their carers.

    •  Provide easy access to relevant up-to-date information for men that is prominently displayed and accessible by all groups.

    •  Promote breast cancer research and development funding programs that include the male experience.


    More here: http://malebc.org/manifesto/


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