I don't know that we have any 40+ women in Avian as gamers but no doubt everyone knows someone who fits that description.
As many of you know, I work for
Fujifilm Medical Systems (FMSU), a daughter company of the Fuji film and camera company you may recognize. About a month ago, Fujifilm Medical began an initiative in cooperation with the National Breast Cancer Foundation and Linens-N-Things called
Images of Health: Mammograms for a Million Moms. The idea is to get 1,000,000 women pledge to have a mammogram. Of one million women to have mammograms, 1,000 of their lives could be saved.
I want to make very clear
this is not a request for money or donations, simply a conversation with a 40+ woman who is important to you.
Fuji was a pioneer in Computed Radiography (CR, a.k.a. x-rays that you look at with a computer instead of a piece of film) and the first to market that technology in North America in 1983.
What do I get out of this? Nothing. I work on our software image-display technology, Synapse and have little to nothing to do with CR. In fact, FMSU doesn't even profit directly. We sell the underlying technology that
may be used in doing a mammogram but any equipment used for this initiative would already be purchased and installed. This is just one of those things I'm proud to be able to say my company is doing and wanted to post this here to get the word out a little more.
What do you get out of this? You could win a
spa getaway...

I've stayed at Canyon Ranch in Tuscon and it...is...awesome.
I can't say I've ever really been a huge proponent of mammograms but after realizing that a lot can be done for individual women like my mom and sister to help them avoid breast cancer by just making use of existing technology, why not encourage them to have a mammogram? It's not like years and years of research need to happen before something can be done...it can be done now - just make use of what's currently available. Early detection of breast cancer can make the difference of life and death.
Fujifilm Medical Systems
Images of Health: Mammograms for a Million Moms