Mammography - Yes or No?
A
recent study showed that mammography - a diagnostic tool that uses x-rays to
detect breast cancer in women - is highly inaccurate. Only 1 to 10
out of 100 ‘positive’ mammography tests are truly positive, which means that
there is a 90 to 99 percent chance of a woman being diagnosed with breast
cancer who doesn’t have it. Since these tests are not
taken only once in a lifetime, the chances of becoming a victim of false
diagnosis for breast cancer are very high.
In Great Britain, about 100,000 women per year
receive a false diagnosis for breast cancer (not excluding other forms of diagnoses). The
women undergo many unnecessary biopsies and an unknown number of mastectomies
(breast amputations). Many of the women suffer unnecessarily from depression, desperation, and fear of dying
as a result of the diagnosis. In the United States, mastectomies have
skyrocketed since mammography became the most popular ‘preventive’ method for
diagnosing breast cancer.
The
medical establishment is very nervous that the truth about the mammogram
technology is finally beginning to surface. After all, it is a huge moneymaker.
Peter Gotzsche, M.D. - a researcher at the Nordic
Cochrane Center in Denmark - and his associates recently published a
peer-reviewed study that found major fault with the results of a large
trial that reported a 31 percent reduction in breast cancer mortality as a result of mammogram screening.
After carefully reviewing the data, Dr. Gotzsche’s team discovered that a large
number of breast cancer deaths in the original data had ‘somehow’ been
left out of the final report. The Gotzsche study was originally published last
in an online edition of the European Journal of Cancer (EJC). Three weeks
later, the study vanished from their web site. Apparently, EJC editors removed
his study because they received complaints from pro-mammogram doctors.
To
suggest mammography to be a diagnostic tool for detecting pre-symptomatic
stages of cancer is deceptive and dubious. In most cases of
breast cancer, it is irrelevant whether breast
cancer is detected at an early or late stage. It is rather the type of cancer
and whether it tends to metastasize (‘spread to’, which in reality means
‘develop in’ other parts of the body as well) at an early stage, that
determines the outcome of the disease. Contrary to common belief, early
detection has not shown to lower mortality rates for these types of cancer.
Also by having many mammograms performed, a woman may put herself at risk for
developing the very disease mammography is supposed to prevent, or worsen it if
it is already present. Mammograms certainly aren't the ‘magic bullet’ for
breast cancer prevention that everyone seems to think they are. For one thing,
mammograms are of very limited effectiveness because they seem only to be able
to detect tumors of a size that is large enough to signify a rather advanced
stage of cancer.
What is most disturbing about this diagnostic method is the excessive
compression of the breast that is required during a routine mammogram. To
produce good pictures and to avoid being sued for missing a tumor, the
technician squeezes the breast extra hard. Squeezing
can rupture internal tissue, including tumor tissue. If there is a
tumor in the breast, performing a mammogram can actually break apart cancerous
cell masses, spill the deadly poisons they contain and cause the disease to
develop in other organs. New research shows that small tumors are especially
prone to such potentially fatal damage.
Forcible flattening of a breast during a
mammogram cannot be considered an acceptable risk, especially when the test is
so ineffective anyway. A large body of research suggests that mammograms may be
only marginally more effective (if at all) than physical exams in detecting
breast cancer. So why use a method that can
exacerbate a disease unnecessarily?
Mammography is a major-league moneymaker for hospitals,
doctors and cancer clinics nationwide. The unsuspecting women
believe that the screening reduces their risk of death from breast cancer by
50-75 percent! In truth, according to research conducted by the U.S. Preventive
Services Task Force, it would be necessary to screen over 1,200 women aged
40-74 every year for 14 years to prevent even one death from breast cancer.
Fortunately for women, the massive
increase in lawsuits as a result of missed tumors is contributing to an
increasing reluctance among doctors and clinics that once offered mammography
to continue doing so.
A 1997 report by the American
National Cancer Institute stated that mammograms showed no
mortality benefit unless women in their 40s had been followed for 10 years.
Other studies have shown that women who have mammograms suffer about the same
rates of death due to breast cancer as women who do not have mammograms. Despite
the fact that over 90 percent of the abnormalities discovered by mammography
have been benign (not cancerous), 63 percent of U.S. women in their 40s keep
having a mammogram every one or two years. This poses a great risk on healthy
women who wish to prevent developing breast cancer in the future. Given the
powerful cancer-inducing effects of mammograms, there is little if any benefit
having a yearly mammogram.
Prevention of breast cancer does not begin with having a mammogram; it
starts with taking active responsibility for one’s body and mind. It can be
said that most natural foods have a cancer preventive effect, and this includes food.
Commenting on a recently released study on the prevention of cancer, John Pezzuto, leader of a food research group at the University
of Illinois in Chicago, U.S.A, said, “…the study does show that a diet loaded
with fruits and vegetables is a good defense against cancer.” Research
has identified a substance in grapes called resveratol
that keeps cells from turning cancerous and inhibits the spread of cells that
are malignant already. Most other natural foods contain similar or even more
powerful cancer-fighting substances.
Women don’t need to rely on mammography to feel safeguarded against
breast cancer, especially since it is highly
unreliable as a diagnostic tool. A series of liver, kidney and colon cleanses
are often enough to prevent, stop and regress any type of cancer.




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