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Environment

Advocacy Groups Ignore Breast Cancer Hot Spots

By Francesca Lyman, Ms. Magazine. Posted October 19, 2006.


Certain parts of the country have significantly higher rates of breast cancer -- but major organizations won't invest in research to find out why.
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Editor's Note:This article is excerpted from the fall 2006 issue of Ms. magazine, available on newsstands now.

Living on the wild, craggy elbow of Cape Cod, Jane Chase feels lucky to have spent 50 years in a house facing Nantucket Sound. "We love it here," she says, looking out over a marsh at a spectacular sunset on Red River Beach.

It wasn't until a few years ago, when a community effort was launched to understand the strangely high rate of breast cancer on Cape Cod, that the mother of six considered her South Harwich, Mass., home to be anything other than a bucolic haven.

The two-time breast cancer survivor might never have linked her disease to the environment had she not joined a local cancer group and later enlisted in a household health study. She then learned that her classic colonial garrison house harbored lurking toxins, and that her idyllic neighborhood had likely been aerially sprayed with now-banned organochlorine pesticides such as DDT.

Cape Cod, with a breast cancer rate 20 percent higher than the rest of Massachusetts, is just one of a several places around the United States with the dubious distinction of being a "hot spot" on our nation's increasingly lit-up breast cancer map. It's joined by Long Island, Marin County and San Francisco -- places where a controversy has brewed for years -- and newly emerging areas such as the Puget Sound in Washington state and Brownsville, Texas.

A large cluster of elevated mortality rates for breast cancer, extending from the Mid-Atlantic through the Northeastern states, has "persisted for many years," says Deborah Winn of the National Cancer Institute (NCI). In the Northeast, rates are about 16 percent higher than the rest of the U.S. and in the smaller swatch from New York City to Philadelphia rates are 7 percent higher than the rest of the Northeast.

The reasons for variable rates of the disease are not well understood, according to Winn. But what is clear is that the discovery of hot spots have sparked a new breast-cancer environmental movement, with strong local advocacy groups as well as new national groups.

Long Island activists began drawing their own breast cancer maps in 1992, pinpointing neighbors' homes as if they were battlefield targets. As more hot spots were identified, each touched off a surge of interest. On Cape Cod, women "called on researchers, like ourselves, to begin studying the problem," says Julia Brody of Silent Spring Institute, in Newton, Mass. Long Island activists went to Congress for research funding to investigate possible environmental factors.

"They felt there was a bias in the scientific literature toward 'known risk factors' for the disease, and that these tend to reside with the personal [factors] -- like [use of] alcohol, tobacco and birth control," says Scott Carlin, a geographer at C.W. Post College. "And there's not an equally well-studied and known list of risk factors in the environmental spheres."

The first flurry of environmental studies proved inconclusive, but activists and scientists have not stopped pursuing the environmental questions. Far from it: Interest in environmental factors is growing, says Kevin Donegan of the Breast Cancer Fund (BCF), one of several national breast cancer advocacy groups that formed in the 1990s. "Our own polls show an overwhelming majority of people believe that pollution of various kinds is driving this disease," he says.


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See more stories tagged with: health, environment, women, breast, cancer, womens, envirohealth, geography, toxins

Francesca Lyman is the author of 'Inside the Dzanga-Sangha Rain Forest' and 'The Greenhouse Trap.'

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I happen to live in one of those hot spots
Posted by: LeftWright on Oct 19, 2006 12:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and it is finally getting the attention it sorely needs.

One more area where defense dollars could be better spent.

Billions for space weapons. Amazing.

The truth shall set us free. Love is the only way forward.

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pollutants
Posted by: rsaxto on Oct 19, 2006 2:09 AM   
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It is fairly clear that various pollutants cause most breast cancer and that most of these pollutants are related to various human activities like agriculture, building, manufacturing, traveling, health care, eating, drinking, breathing, working, swimming, drug taking, bacteria, viruses, hospitalization, etc. It seems logical to find the hottest hot spot and record every aspect of people's lives in that hot spot and do the same thing in a place with a really low incidence of breast cancer. Then compare the differences. It would be expensive but well worth it.

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Michael Townes Watson
Posted by: michaeltwatson on Oct 19, 2006 4:40 AM   
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The elevated breast cancer statistics from certain few areas demonstrate the multi-factorial nature of the disease. It also demonstrates that there is much more research to be done into the causes and cures for this horrible disease. Breast cancer and hospital infections each cause more deaths each year than automobile accidents, homicides and AIDS combined. Health Insurance companies, the most influential decision-makers in the healthcare delivery system, spend more money on breast cancer therapy and hospital infections than any other treatment, yet they refuse to put their weight or money behind prevention of either. Reduction of breast cancer and hospital infections would save billions of dollars of health insurance costs for all Americans, who have the highest incidence of breast cancer of all countries in the world. Again, a problem of our industrialized society, breast cancer, could be substantially remedied by some of the money generated by one of its biggest beneficiaries--the insurance industry. Instead, they spend their time finding ways to deny treatment or diagnosis, rather than stopping disease. Misplaced priorities in healthcare. Michael Townes Watson, author of America's Tunnel Vision--How Insurance Propaganda Is Corrupting Medicine and Law.
www.StopMedicalError.com

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» RE: Michael Townes Watson Posted by: Colin
Environmental exposure a complicated issue
Posted by: mothersmovement on Oct 19, 2006 4:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As this article notes, the government did fund a multi-year environmental study of breast cancer hot-spots in the US (and by the way, BC rates are higher overall in the US than in Europe) and the studies were inconclusive. To complicate factors, many researchers believe that environmental exposures causing malignant mutation in breast cells probably occur during puberty rather than later in a woman's life, so where a woman resides when she is diagnosed with BC may be less important than where she lived as a teenager. More studies should be conducted on environmental factors that may predispose women to breast cancer, but more money also needs to be spent on correcting racial disparities in early diagnosis and mortality outcomes, which are factors affecting thousands of US women right now.

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Living next to an Air Force Base
Posted by: Intraspecto on Oct 19, 2006 6:35 AM   
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My family lived in Atwater Ca, and had a farm right across from Castle AFB on the other side of Hwy 99. OVer the course of a 30 years, chemicals and other shit was dumped into the local cannals and then it found its way into the local water table. Needless to say, Castle has become a Superfund sight. However, a lot of people have been dying from the exposure to various chemicals over the years, and almost all of them have VERY rare forms of cancer. It is sad. I moved away form there and now live in the Northwest, but I know poeple who are still dying slowly. Nobody will do anything to look into the cause of this stuff, and to me it is painfully obvious. Taking that into consideration, I am frustrated that a great many people do not look into this more. I hate it...

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Want to cure breast cancer and save the environment? Then LEGALIZE HEMP and ELEVATE flax !
Posted by: NDnative on Oct 19, 2006 6:50 AM   
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article in Telegraph about this yesterday
Posted by: pinget on Oct 19, 2006 6:57 AM   
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http://tinyurl.com/ygsm6n This article says it's estrogens in our food and consumer products (candles, air fresheners, plastics).

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Welcome to Cancerland
Posted by: fork on Oct 19, 2006 7:05 AM   
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Barbara Ehrenreich addressed this issue in her 2001 article in Harper's Magazine, Welcome to Cancerland:

Worse, by ignoring or underemphasizing the vexing issue of environmental causes, the breast cancer cult turns women into dupes of what could be called the Cancer Industrial Complex: the multinational corporate enterprise that with the one hand doles out carcinogens and disease and, with the other, offers expensive, semi-toxic pharmaceutical treatments. Breast Cancer Awareness Month, for example, is sponsored by AstraZeneca (the manufacturer of tamoxifen), which, until a corporate reorganization in 2000, was a leading producer of pesticides, including acetochlor, classified by the EPA as a "probable human carcinogen." This particularly nasty conjuncture of interests led the environmentally oriented Cancer Prevention Coalition (CPC) to condemn Breast Cancer Awareness Month as "a public relations invention by a major polluter which puts women in the position of being unwitting allies of the very people who make them sick." Although AstraZeneca no longer manufactures pesticides, CPC has continued to criticize the breast-cancer crusade-and the American Cancer Society-for its unquestioning faith in screening mammograms and careful avoidance of environmental issues. In a June 12, 2001, press release, CPC chairman Samuel S. Epstein, M.D., and the well-known physician activist Quentin Young castigated the American Cancer Society for its "longstanding track record of indifference and even hostility to cancer prevention…Recent examples include issuing a joint statement with the Chlorine Institute justifying the continued global use of persistent organochlorine pesticides, and also supporting the industry in trivializing dietary pesticide residues as avoidable risks of childhood cancer. ACS policies are further exemplified by allocating under 0.1 percent of its $700 million annual budget to environmental and occupational causes of cancer."

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Cancer as an industry
Posted by: AdamG on Oct 19, 2006 7:44 AM   
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Of course some groups don't want to acknowledge that environmental degradation and chemical contaminants contribute to cancer. Groups like the American Cancer Society get funding from the same companies contributing to the problem. Some of these same companies, especially pharmaceutical companies, cash in on treating cancer. That's why the research money going to find a "cure" is looking for what combo of butchery and poisoning will do the trick. Where's the money to be made in lessening chemical use in general, eating a diet of fresh, seasonal wholesome foods, having meaningful work and lives for people as stress is a contributor as well?

People need to keep educating themselves and work on the things, especially diet and lifestyle, that can help keep them cancer free.

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» RE: Cancer as an industry Posted by: AdamG
Breast Cancer and Environmental Research Act S.757
Posted by: ljh on Oct 19, 2006 10:23 AM   
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There is a current bill, with 99 co-sponsors, that would have funded research into environmental aspects of breast cancer. It was passed out of committee but so far has not gotten to the floor of the house because of a hold by Sen. Coburn. As far as I know that senator has not explained his hold.

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Is it Ted's fault?
Posted by: velvel of atlanta on Oct 19, 2006 12:28 PM   
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Perhaps if there were windmills on the coast the evil sprits would be driven away.
Seriously, who should determine how the research is to be done? Surely not the government.
Surely not the pharm industry.
Surely not the petrol industry.
Maybe if the Congress were only in session six months per year the money spent for bridges to nowhere and city parks in Asheville could be reallocated?
Or if the Senator thinks it important why doesn't he spend the money that came from Depression-era bootlegging and deals with other bad guys ought to be used.

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sleigh
Posted by: sleigh on Oct 19, 2006 2:10 PM   
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The relationship between environmental/chemical exposures and breast cancer is incredibly complex, and advocates have done more than this headline might lead one to believe.

It's important to note that statistics on Long Island have been questioned. As the well respected NBCC points out on its website: in the early 1980's, news articles mistakenly reported that breast cancer rates in Long Island, New York were 30% higher than the national average. This figure has been quoted often, but there is no data to back it up. In fact, many areas have much higher breast cancer rates.

I'm in no way an apologist for all of the companies that have polluted the environment, but am one for acknowledging that what sometimes appears to be causal isn't always....

The recent report by Silent Spring on breast cancer on the Cape can be found here:
http://www.silentspring.org/newweb/research/cape.html

NCI has given $$$ to look at breast cancer rates in Marin: http://www.cancer.gov/newscenter/pressreleases/marin

Latest data from Marin, which show breast cancer incidence now declining (but with racial/ethnic disparities)

http://www.nccc.org/

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» links Posted by: LDavistrueblue
Who are on the boards of the various cancer organizations?
Posted by: antoniomo on Oct 19, 2006 7:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm pretty sure I read several years ago about the board membership of the various national cancer groups being composed of a lot of pollution-causing industry representatives and pharmaceutical company representatives. The article made the point that these boards intentionally kept research funding away from studies that might look at environmental factors and on research that steered solutions towards drug treatments. I wish the article in Ms. would have looked into that connection.

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Kid connection questioned
Posted by: Sushi on Oct 20, 2006 10:45 AM   
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Every woman I know who has (or has had) breast cancer has had a child. Every one. I keep hearing how women who never bore children are at higher risk. I know my sample demo is much smaller than the epidemiological study cases, but it still puzzles me why I know of not one childless woman with breast cancer myself. Anybody?

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» I know of one, but she was 28 Posted by: planet doomed
Its to Obvious....and I'm Not Even a Scientist
Posted by: urbanaturalist on Oct 20, 2006 12:24 PM   
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Is it not obvious, as an earlier poster wrote, the system itself is flawed and out of control. We....the U.S. of A, the wealthiest country on earth, have for the past 100 years created more synthetic chemicals within our borders than any other country up to this point. Years later, we found out this and that chemical is dangerous and toxic and carcinogenic. Then businesses and industries protest and bring up the HOLY MANTRA.....of "what about the jobs." So politicians and gullible citizens align and acquiesce. Once in awhile we've gotten groundbreaking federal and state legislations that outlaw the use of this and that chemical, so businesses and industries illegally and legally dispose of these chemicals in our waterways or in underground sites.

Its obvious that the chemicals that we've been producing whether from buidlings, car emissions, smoketstacks, or in manufactured products themselves are causing this CANCERLAND that we reside in. Isn't there studies that show 100s of synthetic chemicals in any random American's body. We barely know what a single chemical can do, much less how they react together.

Think about it, as many problems as there are in Africa right now, one issue that is not really talked about is cancer, because people don't or get cancer in the same rates that folks in the U.S. do. Arguably, they Africa may not have the best environmental standards, but there society is not nearly as infiltrated with manufactured goods, industries, and cars as we are here in the U.S.

I dare anyone to examine the bloodstreams of Africans to see how many synthetic chemicals you find in their bodies compared to Americans. I dare you! then tell me that our Industrial System doesn't need a facelift or overhaul.

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The Apple Bites Back
Posted by: de Halve Maen on Oct 23, 2006 5:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Check the NIH's Environmental Health Perspectives August 2006.The Apple Bites Back. This article that looks at old farmland that has been developed into subvisions. The vestiges of pesticides are mobilized when the soil is turned over for development.
Could it be that Rachel Carson is having the last laugh?

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Genocide against womyn
Posted by: Burton on Oct 25, 2006 5:06 PM   
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Omigod omigod omigod!

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