Anonymous wrote:How do you get your doc to agree to a breast MRI if nothing abnormal is there? I have dense breasts and have had a few call-backs and decided aftr the last one that mammogram doesn't make sense for me. Should I push to get yearly/bi-yearly breast MRI instead?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The biggest issue is the number of women treated with toxic drugs, surgery and radiation due to fear of lawsuits (and for the woman, fear of death).
In addition, mammography has such a high sue-rate that doctors add more tests to protect themselves. And who can blame them?
It's such a double-edged sword.
I just stay away from the scam.
I have posted skepticism of mammograms (though I also pointed out that breast MRIs are an excellent tool for women with dense breasts) but I can't abide the conspiracy theories here. The toxic drugs, surgery and radiation saved my life when I was diagnosed with stage II breast cancer. The treatments suck but for most women they work and they're the best we have. And the only reason we have them at all is because of the breast cancer movement started in the 1970s by WOMEN themselves who were sick of the fact that there were no effective treatments available, just, essentially, the luck of the drawer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Mammogram radiation is a known cause of cancer"?? Really?
I've never heard/read that the radiation in a mammogram has been proven to cause cancer.
Have a statistician or mathematician look at the studies. My DH advised me to wait to get a mammogram and not listen to the doctors. His Mom died of breast cancer and, after looking at the numbers, he believes that aggressive use of mammograms may lead to more cancer than they prevent, if you don't have other risk factors. I've wondered if the recent announcement (last year or two) upping the age to start mammograms again has anything to do with this. News articles weren't too specific.
Anonymous wrote:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22184734
To prevent one death from breast cancer, one must screen 400 women annually over a 10 year period. 4,000 mammograms to save one life. If you or someone you love is that one person, I will not debate the absolute value of mammograms. But step back and consider the dollar cost of those 4,000 mammograms. And while I do not have the statistics handy, I am quite sure that more than one false positive accompanied by unnecessary treatment is associated with those 4,000 screens.
Even reducing screening to every other year seems like a reasonable tactic. A decision for each of us to make without pressure from the pink ribbon crowd.
Anonymous wrote:"Mammogram radiation is a known cause of cancer"?? Really?
I've never heard/read that the radiation in a mammogram has been proven to cause cancer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The biggest issue is the number of women treated with toxic drugs, surgery and radiation due to fear of lawsuits (and for the woman, fear of death).
In addition, mammography has such a high sue-rate that doctors add more tests to protect themselves. And who can blame them?
It's such a double-edged sword.
I just stay away from the scam.
I have posted skepticism of mammograms (though I also pointed out that breast MRIs are an excellent tool for women with dense breasts) but I can't abide the conspiracy theories here. The toxic drugs, surgery and radiation saved my life when I was diagnosed with stage II breast cancer. The treatments suck but for most women they work and they're the best we have. And the only reason we have them at all is because of the breast cancer movement started in the 1970s by WOMEN themselves who were sick of the fact that there were no effective treatments available, just, essentially, the luck of the drawer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most women I know dutifully go each year for their mammogram. Most women I know also drink alcohol fairly regularly, are overweight, and eat a lot of junk and too few fruits and vegetables. Too much emphasis on early detection and pink ribbon campaigns and not nearly enough prevention, IMHO.
If only it were true. I'm a breast cancer survivor who has posted on this thread -- I had node-positive cancer. When I was diagnosed I had been a vegetarian my entire adult life, I was physically fit -- a runner -- and not at all overweight, I was not a person who ate junk food, at all, and as for drinking if you count two or three glasses of wine in a week as "regular" I guess I did that. No family history. Prevention is the dream but we just aren't there yet. Diet and exercise can help around the margins. Probably some breast cancers every year can be prevented through better diet and exercise. But not most of them. Just as you can't assume you are safe if you have no family history, you can't assume you are safe if you have a healthy lifestyle.
I agree with most of what you say and I am not at all trying to blame the victim. However, given that more than two thirds of this country is overweight or obese, I still believe that more healthful diet would make a difference at the population level. The government currently recommends 9 servings of fruits and veggies a day. And if you exclude french fried potatoes and ketchup, how many of us really do that?! Even vegetarians tend to fill up on grains rather than true veggies. So my point is not that mammograms are bad, just that they are insufficient. Best wishes to you and may you continue to thrive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most women I know dutifully go each year for their mammogram. Most women I know also drink alcohol fairly regularly, are overweight, and eat a lot of junk and too few fruits and vegetables. Too much emphasis on early detection and pink ribbon campaigns and not nearly enough prevention, IMHO.
If only it were true. I'm a breast cancer survivor who has posted on this thread -- I had node-positive cancer. When I was diagnosed I had been a vegetarian my entire adult life, I was physically fit -- a runner -- and not at all overweight, I was not a person who ate junk food, at all, and as for drinking if you count two or three glasses of wine in a week as "regular" I guess I did that. No family history. Prevention is the dream but we just aren't there yet. Diet and exercise can help around the margins. Probably some breast cancers every year can be prevented through better diet and exercise. But not most of them. Just as you can't assume you are safe if you have no family history, you can't assume you are safe if you have a healthy lifestyle.
Anonymous wrote:Most women I know dutifully go each year for their mammogram. Most women I know also drink alcohol fairly regularly, are overweight, and eat a lot of junk and too few fruits and vegetables. Too much emphasis on early detection and pink ribbon campaigns and not nearly enough prevention, IMHO.