Mammograms are more harmful than you think (NaturalNews) Mammograms are widely touted as an effective breast cancer screening tool. But some research and experts suggest that it could be causing more harm than good.
Increases cancer risk
In undergoing mammograms, women are exposed to radiation. And radiation, as we know, is a
cause of cancer.
Dr. Russell Blaylock, an oncologist, brain surgeon, and neuroscientist, estimated that annual mammograms could raise breast cancer risk by 1 percent to 3 percent per year. According to him, "some radiologists say it's even higher than that".
In a study on 1,600 European women published in the
Journal of Clinical Oncology in July 2006, researchers found that women who underwent mammograms at least once had a 54 percent higher risk of developing breast cancer as compared to those who never did.
Further, Dr. Samuel Epstein, in his book
The Politics of Cancer, wrote: "Regular mammography of younger women increases their cancer risks. Analysis of controlled trials over the last decade has shown consistent increases in breast cancer mortality within a few years of commencing screening. This confirms evidence of the high sensitivity of the premenopausal breast, and on cumulative carcinogenic effects of radiation."
And it's not just about the radiation. During mammograms, the breast is at times quite literally crushed, in a bid to get clearer images. The pain can get so bad as to bring tears to some women's eyes. Such physical manipulation of tumors, should they be present, could actually trigger the spread of cancer cells into the system, thereby elevating the risk of future metastasis.
Indeed, Dr. Charles Simone, a former
National Cancer Institute associate, said that "
mammograms increase the risk for developing breast cancer and raise the risk of spreading or metastasizing an existing growth."
Poor accuracy
Many doctors do not feel that mammograms are effective at detecting breast tumors. In a Swedish study published in the
British Medical Journal which involved 60,000
women, it was revealed that seven out of every 10 tumors flagged up by mammograms were in fact false positives.
And false positives often result in unnecessary emotional anguish, financial drain, invasive biopsies, and even physical maiming.
The "diagnostics are really not that accurate, and they are causing a lot of women to have chemo and radiation for no reason at all," said Dr. Blaylock.
And not to mention lose their breasts through mastectomies as well.
Doesn't lower death rate
To compound matters, some research, including a recent large Canadian study which followed 90,000 women for 25 years, showed that mammograms did not lower the overall death rate from breast
cancer. It is clear that while mammograms could have saved some women, it's probably also harming others. Here, it is important to make the distinction between emotional and statistical analyses and keep the big picture in mind.
Profits and politics
Why, then, does mammography remain a mainstream screening tool?
"This industry supports radiologists, x-ray technicians, surgeons, nurses, manufacturers of x-ray equipment, hospitals, etc, and will not be allowed to disappear by curing and preventing breast cancer," said Dr. James Howenstine.
"There is evidence that mammograms are not really that diagnostic and may be inducing breast cancer, particularly in highly sensitive women. But so much money is being made, and so much money has been invested in these units in hospitals, that no one wants to admit the truth," Dr. Blaylock also said.
Alternative diagnostic tool
A good alternative to mammography is thermography, a safe, very accurate, inexpensive diagnostic method which can detect breast cancer many years earlier than physical exams and mammograms. Progressive physicians in Europe and the US have been using
thermography since 1962.
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