October 10, 2011 from PreventDisease Website
Studies confirm what the complementary health communities have been
stating for decades. Breast and prostate cancer screenings result in
an increase in breast and prostate cancer mortality respectively and
fail to address prevention.
These "false positives" aren't just financial and emotional strains, they may also lead to many unnecessary and invasive biopsies. In fact, 70 to 80 percent of all positive mammograms do not, upon biopsy, show any presence of cancer.
When it comes to prostate cancer, a 20-year study from Sweden suggests that screening for prostate cancer does not reduce the risk of death from the disease.
In fact, many men receive false-positive results and overtreatment, adding an element of risk to wide-scale screening, researchers report in the March 31 online issue of the BMJ.
In 2009, a firestorm of
controversy erupted when a top official with the American Cancer
Society let slip that the benefits of breast cancer and prostate
cancer screening may have been oversold.
Brawley who made a statement in an interview
with the New York Times about a Journal of the American Medical
Association analysis of breast and prostate cancer screening, which
raised questions about claims that screening saves lives.
This test
analyzes the blood for PSA, a substance produced by the prostate
gland. If higher-than-normal levels of PSA are detected, the claim
is that cancer is present.
That is to say, the large majority of PSA-discovered
"cancers" would never cause any problem whatsoever if they went
undetected. Finding something through screening invariably leads to
treating it through conventional means which cause cancer
themselves.
So much for
early diagnosis!
It is also known to switch off the
tumor
suppressing gene. Now, new research from the
Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory in America (a US Government facility) has shown
that radiation both changes the environment around breast cells, and
increases the risks of mutation within them; a mutation that can be
passed on in cell division.
Yawsen stated that radiation specialists have been slow in understanding these concepts.
Moreover, men and women undergoing routine breast and prostate
cancer screenings are not being warned of the risks, with many tests
which inevitably leads to overtreatment. Malicious recommendations from the Society of Breast Imaging (SBI) and the American College of Radiology (ACR) on breast cancer screening suggested that breast cancer screening should begin at age 40 and earlier in high-risk patients.
The recommendations also
suggest further utilization of lethal medical imaging tools such as
mammography which has itself been found to cause cancer.
As ABC News reported, Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, the deputy chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society, says,
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