National Got Checked Day | August 26
Sat Aug 26th

National Got Checked Day

On August 26th, National Got Checked Day initiates a call to action, giving a friendly reminder and asking a simple question, got checked? YES! Be inspired as you answer, YES! Be inspired.

#nationalgotcheckedday

Routine breast cancer screenings can save lives. Routine breast cancer screenings can save lives. However, it is also vital to begin breast/chest health early in life.

The seed of prevention is planted in the early stages of childhood. The breast/chest health building blocks can last a lifetime. Although it starts in youth with a gradual schedule, most people can maintain the routine into adulthood. What does a gradual diet look like?

  • Families are important in family history
  • Create a healthy balance between fitness and diet to achieve a healthy balance
  • Develop spiritual and mental stability.
  • Find purpose and set life goals
  • Create positive relationships with others in order to have positive interactions
  • Understand your relationship with the environment and its effects on your mind, body, and soul
  • Healthy, flourishing uses music, dance, and the arts as a means of achieving
  • Learn how to perform a self-breast or chest exam early in life. Know the warnings to look for and do not dismiss them
  • With your ob-gyn and general practitioner, regular discussions about genetics and screening options should be continued. Screening sessions should include regular discussions about genetics and screening choices
  • Routinely schedule breast screenings.

National Got Checked? Women and men of all ages are encouraged to make their lifestyle choices and follow all of the screening recommendations..

How to celebrate national got checked day? How to recognize national got checked day?

The Got Checked? campaign has tirelessly argued for a new model of "gradual and age-appropriate" breast/chest health education. It will give everyone a chance of a healthy life if paired with modern legislation. Got checked? grew out of the desire for a gradual routine that begins early in life. Got checked? The routine includes decreasing anxiety, promoting self-awareness, and making it a part of your daily life. For example, mammograms in the United States were once set at age 50. Now, however, most states' constitutions make the age prescription 40 years old. However, New York law takes it a step farther. Shannon's Law lowered the age limit to 35 years old, giving younger women a better chance of surviving through the efforts of Got Checked?

As a woman or a man, recognize your power of positive influence. Today is the time of your screening. However, remember to: Remember to: However, also remember to: Remember to: Remember to:

  • Keep doing your regular self-exams
  • Keep track of your and your family's health history and genetic testing methods
  • Discuss breast/chest health and lifestyle choices for prevention at home
  • Encourage action in all your tribe's of relatives, acquaintances, and co-workers to get checked and get it done
  • Company Pink. Donate to First Company Pink

In addition, be sure to post using #NationalGotCheckedDay and #GotChecked on all your social media pages to inspire change around the country.

The national got checked day is the longest in national history

Donna Cioffi, a cancer sufferer and the President and Founder of First Company Pink, is honored on August 26th. National Got Checked Day was established in 2021 by First Company Pink (501c3 non-profit) and founded National Got Checked Day. (501c3 non-profit) The organization's decade of involvement has honed on early prevention. t.v.

Pink is the first company pink. About the first company pink

Everyone, everywhere, is encouraged to take action by Pink's Got Checked? campaign. '' The campaign has reached thousands of youth and adults in New York through charity workshops. The campaign has expanded to thousands of youth and adults.

In 2018, the first bill by the Got Checked? campaign was passed. The statute was inspired by a Long Island teacher who died of breast cancer at the age of 31. Shannon's Law lowers the mammogram age prescription to 35 in New York to 35.

Got checked? recently endorsed two new bills that represent its main educational principles toward prevention and social justice.

ducation is included in New York schools under Siena's Law, which provides age-appropriate, gradual breast/chest health education. The bill, named after Shannon's daughter, Siena Hope, is the culmination of an education program that culminates in high school. It gives youth the ability to perform self-breast and chest exams. It also teaches the importance of ACTION.

Also, the Eleonora Legacy Act passed unanimously in Assembly and is now on the Senate floor. Justice in: This critical bill embodies the core values of the Got Checked campaign, and it is reflected in: This important bill embodies the campaign's core values.

  • education
  • healthcare
  • human rights

All incarcerated women in New York correctional facilities will be entitled to breast health education and bi-annual screenings.

As part of a year-long campaign, the Got Checked? campaign aims not to leave anyone behind and ensure ALL WOMEN/ MEN get the medical attention and education they need.