It takes a long wait to get a mammogram these days, sometimes
up to a month. The waiting rooms are jammed despite the
opening of new mammography centers. It is clear that more
women than ever are operating under the delusion that
mammograms reduce the risk of death from breast cancer,
even in the face of overwhelming evidence that radiation
causes all types of cancer including that of the breast.
The more radiation a woman receives in her lifetime, whether
it is during a dental exam, at an airport, or during her
yearly mammogram, the more likely it is that she will
develop breast
cancer. In fact, the spiraling rates of breast cancer
seen in the last 25 years may be directly tied to the
increased use of mammography.
The American Cancer Society (ACS) and the National Cancer
Institute (NCI) began to encourage the use of mammography
in the early 1980's. Mammography fit right in with their
financial objectives and even the advertising rhetoric
at the time that urged "a checkup and a check". For the
past 25 years, women have paid the price for compliance
to a cancer
industry that failed to have their best interests
at heart.
The harmful effects of radiation and mammograms
have been known for decades
In 1974, while mammography was in its infancy, the National
Cancer Institute was warned by Professor Malcolm C. Pike
at the University of Southern California School of Medicine
that a number of specialists had concluded that "giving
a women under age 50 a mammogram on a routine basis was
close to unethical". This warning was ignored.
Also in the 1970's, the Director of Biostatistics at Rosewell
Park Memorial Institute for Cancer Research, Dr. Irwin
Bross, headed a study involving data from 16 million people.
This ground breaking study found that the main cause of
the rising rates of leukemia was medical radiation in
the form of diagnostic medical X-rays.
Applying his findings to the breast cancer screening program,
Dr. Bross later elaborated that "women should have been
given the information about the hazards of radiation at
the same time they were given the sales talk for mammography."
In the early 1980's as the mammogram began to be rolled
out to women across the country in the face of this research,
the NCI and ACS jointly urged annual breast X-rays for
women under age 50. Doctors assumed there was good evidence
supporting the recommendations and became enthusiastically
ordered mammograms for all their female patients, even
though they should have know better.
In 1985, the Lancet, one of the five leading medical
journals in the world, published an article condemning
the mammography recommendations under which "Over 280,000
women were recruited without being told that no benefit
of mammography had been shown in a controlled trial for
women below 50, and without being warned about the potential
risk of induction of breast cancer by the test which was
supposed to detect it.
Dr. John Gofman, Professor Emeritus of Molecular and Cell
Biology at the University of California at Berkeley, in
the early 1990's found that three-quarters of the annual
incidence of breast cancer in the United States was caused
by earlier ionizing radiation, primarily from medical
sources. He did not under estimate the role played by
pesticides, synthetic hormones, fatty diets and other
environmental stressors, stating "There is no inherent
conflict or competition between carcinogens," because
they multiply each other's carcinogenic effects. Dr. Gofman
abhorred the fact that although X-rays and radiotherapy
were among the few environmental contaminants known unequivocally
to cause many forms of cancer, they were routinely recommended
and used with many cancer patients although there was
no proven benefit to survival.
The media and the government health officials stayed silent
regarding the mounting evidence that mammograms caused
cancer, and the ACS and the NCI continued to recommend
mammograms. In 1992 Samuel Epstein, professor at the University
of Illinois Medical Center along with 64 other distinguished
cancer authorities opposed this status quo thinking and
warned the public about what the ACS and NCI were up to.
The next month, the Washington Post broke the story into
the mainstream media, exposing what the ACS and the NCI
had done to countless women for several years. In this
article Dr. Epstein was quoted, "The high sensitivity
of the breast, especially in young women, to radiation
induced cancer was known by 1970. . . the establishment
ignores safe and effective alternatives to mammography."
He saw this as a conscious, chosen, politically expedient
act by a small group of people for the sake of their own
power, prestige and financial gain, resulting in suffering
and death for millions of women. He regarded them as committing
"crimes against humanity".
In December, 1992, the New York Times published
facts about mammography and concluded that women were
not being told the truth.
In 1995, the Lancet again blasted the ACS and NCI
mammography scam by concluding: "The benefit is marginal,
the harm caused is substantial, and the costs incurred
are enormous."
Meanwhile, women's health advocate Susan Weed began to
publish her findings. In Breast Cancer? Breast Health!
The Wise Woman Way, she reports that "scientists agree
that there is no safe dose of radiation. Cellular DNA
in the breast is more easily damaged by very small doses
of radiation than thyroid tissue or bone marrow; in fact,
breast cells are second only to fetal tissues in sensitivity
to radiation. As an added risk, one percent of American
women carry a hard-to-detect oncogene which is triggered
by radiation: a single mammogram increases their risk
of breast cancer by a factor of 4-6 times."
Sister Rosalie Bertell, a highly respected world authority
on the dangers of radiation wrote that one rad of radiation
increased breast cancer risk one percent and is the equivalent
of one year's natural aging. "If a woman has yearly mammograms
from age 55 to 75, she will receive a minimum of 20 rads
of radiation. Women surviving the blast in Hiroshima absorbed
35 rads.
As a result of all this pressure, Dr. Charles B. Simone,
a former clinical associate in immunology and pharmacology
at the National Cancer Institute finally came out and
said "Mammograms increase the risk for developing breast
cancer and raise the risk of spreading or metastasizing
an existing growth. The annual mammographic screening
of 10,000 women aged 50-70 will extend the lives of, at
best, 26 of them; and the annual screening of 10,000 women
in their 40s will extend the lives of only 12 women per
year."
Radiation is not the only danger posed to women by
mammograms
Although mammography is widely used for early cancer detection
screening, remarkably little attention has been paid to
the techniques of breast compression used in the mammography
procedure, according to William Campbell Douglass, Jr.,
writing for the Weston A. Price Foundation. He
saw that although the principal of handling cancer very
gently so as not to spread it is widely accepted by the
medical profession, it doesn't apply to breast screening.
During mammography the techniques used are designed for
maximum detection of abnormalities without regard to the
possible consequences of the action. Douglass notes a
survey that found mammographers used as much compression
as the patient could tolerate and had no idea how much
compression they were using. In fact, the guidelines for
mammography state that "adequacy of the compression device
is crucial to good quality mammography." That force is
300 newtons, the equivalent of placing a 50 pound weight
on the breast.
Cambell reports one animal study that found that the number
of metastases will increase by 80 percent if the tumor
is manipulated. A human study reported in the British
Medical Journal found that death rates were increase
by 29 percent in women whose breasts were squeezed during
mammography. This is likely to be the result of the rupture
of small blood vessels in or around small yet undetected
breast cancers. This squeezing into the blood stream of
malignant cells is why many women with breast cancer have
cancer cells in their lymph nodes.
Mistaken false positive diagnoses are common in pre-menopausal
women and post-menopausal women on estrogen replacement
therapy because the breast tissue of these women is dense
and glandular in nature. These mistakes result in needless
anxiety, more mammograms, and highly dangerous biopsies
that will cause cancer cells to metastasize if indeed
there is a cancer. For the group of women with multiple
high-risk factors, such as a strong family history, prolonged
use of contraceptives, early menarche, and no history
of breast feeding, the cumulative risk of false positives
increases to as high as 100 percent over a decade of screening
due to this being the group most strongly urged to participate
in multiple screenings.
Over diagnosis and subsequent over treatment are major
risks of mammography. The unchallenged use of screening
has resulted in a huge increase in the diagnosis of ductal
carcinoma-insitu (DCIS), a pre-invasive form of cancer
which has about 40,000 diagnoses annually. DCIS is composed
of micro-calcifications and treated by lumpectomy plus
radiation or even mastectomy and chemotherapy. However,
over 80 percent of DCIS do not become invasive if left
untreated. The mortality rate from DCIS is the same as
for women diagnosed and treated early and for those diagnosed
later, following the development of invasive cancer.
The Lancet reported that, since mammographic screening
was first introduced, the incidence of DCIS, which represents
12% of all breast cancer cases, has increased by 328%
for all women, and 200% of this increase is due to the
use of mammography. The increase in incidence for women
under the age of 40 has gone up over 3000%. Without any
screening and intervention, many DCIS situations are able
to be positively resolved by the body, leaving women in
blissful ignorance of their situation.
Mammograms fail to reduce breast cancer mortality
Despite all evidence to the contrary, the mantra remains
that routine mammography screening allows early detection
and treatment of breast cancer and reduces mortality.
In reality, the vast majority of breast cancers are unaffected
by early detection, either because they are aggressive
or because they are not. The aggressive cancers will continue
to kill women no matter how much surgery, radiation, and
chemotherapy they have, unless the source of their cancer
is addressed. The cancers that are not aggressive suggest
a well functioning immune system that would be compromised
by traditional treatments. Cancerous tumors should serve
as a wake up call.
Mammograms divert women's attention from addressing
the real issues
The mammogram industry has made women passive participant
in their own health. If the result of the mammogram is
positive, the woman moves on to the next phase in the
cancer machine. She has even more mammograms followed
by biopsies. If a cancer is found she enters the belly
of the machine where she undergoes surgery, radiation
and chemotherapy. She is prescribed a regime of debilitating
drugs to carry her through the rest of her life, and she
is spit out the other end of the machine completely ignorant
of what caused her to have cancer in the first place and
what she can do to try to regain her health.
If the result is negative, she breathes a sigh of relief,
schedules another mammogram for next year, and goes about
her business as usual. Again, she is given no information
with which to empower herself about how to avoid cancer.
In a world where women were well treated, these actions
of the cancer industry would be abhorrent. In this kind
of world, a woman would be allowed to discover breast
irregularities on her own and come to treatment center
where a physician would help her examine her physical
situation, personal history and psychology, and lifestyle.
A treatment protocol would be designed specifically for
her based on her situation. This protocol would address
how best to restore balance and health to all aspects
of her body, mind and spirit.








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