Breast cancer task force touches off a firestorm
By CAROL ROBIDOUX
New Hampshire Union Leader Staff
Wednesday, Nov. 18, 2009
Health care professionals, breast cancer survivors criticize findings that routine cancer screenings should be less frequent and not begin until age 50.
►Click here to view the USPSTF's recommendations on breast cancer screening.
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YOUR COMMENTS
As far as national healthcare reform goes, there is plenty of hypocrisy on both sides of the issue. If the Health Insurers did honor their contracts we would not be having this debate.
My daughter was seriously ill one year ago. Three Harvard doctors wanted to extend her hospital stay. At 4 pm, the insurer informed them she was to be kicked to the curb at 5pm the same day despite the fact that we have excellent coverage that provided for many more weeks of inpatient care. I am in the health care litigation business and could not get their attention until I called my local GOP State Senator who called a former (not the current) insurance commissioner. Then they changed their minds in a hurry.
The current left wing crew in power has a history of talk and no action...or talk and opposite action. It is who they are. I know because for many years I was one of their key allies in Derry until their hypocrisy was more than even I could stand.
Want another example? Jeanne Shaheen voted in the U.S. Senate this month to block restrictions on interest rates charged by credit card companies allowing them to increase rates pre 2/1/2010 to more than 30%. where is her vaunted campaign slogan "fighting for NH families" now????
Do not blame Bush for this healthcare decision, he left office nearly a year ago. Obama can replace the crew in question anytime he wants. Moreover, the breast screening change is in fact a decision designed to ratchet back covered care in an effort to restrain costs when heathcare reform is enacted. Wake up.
- PAUL NEEDHAM, Derry NH
- Karen, Nashua
Guess it all depends on whose life is at stake, huh?
- Sue, Salem
The members of the team making these “proper recommendations” (your conclusion, not mine) were not experts in cancer, breast cancer treatment and options, etc. They were mostly General Practice or Public Health Doctors. If I’m going to take anybody’s recommendation on a SPECIFIC disease/course of treatment – it’s going to be the specialist. These folks were already on the job during the Bush administration and were kept on after Obama administration took over. They wouldn’t still be here delivering products if the current administration didn’t want them.
You point out that one of the reasons for this change in breast cancer guidelines was to avoid the stressful situation of enduring “false positives”. Well, can you tell me how YOU KNOW it’s a false positive before you’ve had the investigative MRI/biopsy? And I have to tell you, most women are pretty resilient. They have to be to put up with the “weaker sex” stupidity that seems to rear its ugly head every so often. And the last time I checked, childbirth was not exactly a walk in the park on the stress meter, either. We know how to survive AND thrive.
Another factor from the study seemed to be that they wanted women to avoid the terrible dangers of overexposure to radiation. Really? Did anyone ask a breast cancer survivor how they felt about all the radiation and chemo therapy that resulted in the eradication of their cancer and a clean bill of health how they felt about the risk? And the few seconds of radiation from the mammogram on a yearly basis can’t be all that terribly dangerous. I’m sorry, with all the nasty stuff flying around in the atmosphere and in our drinking water and in our food; I really can’t take that one very seriously. I’ll take life any day thank you and so will all the survivors.
The fact is that America has the highest cancer survival rate in the world, and preventive care through regular screening, especially for breast cancer, started early on in life is the primary reason. Just go check out the ACS and the Susan G. Komen Foundation – the statistics are all there.
- Sandy, Thornton
Maybe Lillian of Newcastle should hear those terrible words from a doctor... you have cancer... or go through surgery to remove part of your breast or have three months of chemo, getting sick and losing her hair and fingernails and then getting burned by radiation five days a week for seven weeks.
"Typical ignorant people". Well this typical ignorant person would probably be dead if not for finding cancer through a mammo at 48 years old.
- Betsy, 2 1/2 year survivor
- Betsy, Kingston
- The Other Jake, Manchester
For additional information, the Cancer Blog of Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, our deputy medical director, has a full discussion of this issue, http://www.cancer.org/aspx/blog/Comments.aspx?id=331
- Matt Lyman, American Cancer Society, Bedford, NH
- Norma J Gecks, Derry
Statically women who get mammoscams have no higher a survival rate than women who don't. Mammoscams are just one of the many poisons that cause cancer when humans are exposed to them.
Cancer is not an innate or hereditary disease. It is an environmental disease brought on by overloading the body with more toxins than it can handle. We are the ones causing the cancer epidemic with all the toxins we put into our bodies and expose ourselves to. And the ironic thing is that many of those toxins, including radiation, are coming from the health care industry! There is no profit in keeping patients healthy, only in making them customers for life.
- James Longfellow, Hooksett
THis is such an emotional topic for so many. I am NOT putting off my mamm, I'll get one when I darn well feel like it. Why? For three generations, everyone who has passed in my family was due to CANCER. So, yeah, I can kind of guess what my fate will be, and so sorry if I want to know what 'flavor' I'll be lucky enough to get. So bring on the mammies, the colonoscopies, and blood tests... I can handle it.
What I CAN'T handle is the ignorance of panels trying to get us all talking about, "oh its no big deal..." so that when our claims are denied we don't fight back! National Health Care? A JOKE.
- Getting Tested, Manchester
- Bob, Salem
- D, Derry, NH
- Lynda Pelletier, Candia NH
i think they should get some one that knows what they are talking about before they just let people like that just say what ever they wont to. i a man but thats the way i feel .
- Ed leclerc, wolfeboro nh
If my wife of 25+ years had not done a self-breast exam & got herself to a specialist ASAP, she would not be alive today. While I wish her IBC diagnosis had been a false positive, I am glad she took immediate action and didn't ignore it because of some stupid gov't study!
- Carl White, Weare
made headlines in our paper down
here and I commend your readers for
their comments. There are MANY readers here in Va that concur with ya'll
in NH and feel that both Women & Men
should stand up for our rights as citizens
to have proper health care and preventive maintance to stay healthy
at any age!!
- M Garrison, Williamsburg, va
But regular screening is expensive--which is why the Obamacrats have devised this dastardly plan. By encouraging women to delay screening, the aggregate cost of health care will be reduced substantially. This, in turn, will make Obamacare look more appealing to Americans, given their growing concern over the deficit. But at what cost to us in terms of our health and longevity? Bob's right, this is another death panel.
- Susie, Horseshoe Bay, TX (NH native)
She obviously has not considered that these recommendations have a way of becoming claim guidelines for insurance companies. Not to mention the government who will most certainly use recommendations form a government appointed panel to drive policy.
It is not koolaid! Nobody said the study will prevent people form being able to get the screenings BUT it will probably be on their dime.
- Peter, Nottingham
The public plan will go by HHS recommendations not the ACS. So when we all have public healthcare and you want an annual screen, I guess your government won't pay for it. Nice. Real nice.
- Derek, Concord, NH
The head of the study was on CNN last night, and Wolf Blitzer did his best to corner her for sensationalist purposes as is done in this article. He couldn't do it, because she is a good scientist working with good facts and making proper recommendations.
There is no call to ignore breast cancer until 50, it is instead a change in normal recommendations. In other words if you want a mammogram at 40 have it, but do have one at 50 whether you want one or not. Have it at 30 if you want to, but it's also not recommended.
The doctor said, "Inspect your breasts normally, have your mammogram in consult with your doctor, it is no longer standard to automatically have one at 40."
This does not mean ignore cancer, it simply addresses false positives, false worry, and moves the RECOMMENDED time to a later age. I know, all the facts get in the way of koolaid thinking, sorry!
- Lillian, Newcastle
Norma Jean Gecks
Survivor & Advocate
- Norma J Gecks, Derry
- steve, concord, nh
What is frightening is the increasing occurrence of Government intervention into my personal freedom of choice. When are people going to stand up and say enough is enough and get off our backs?!
And after having read the latest health care abomination that was passed by the House, I can tell you that this is only the tip of the iceberg. Rationing and denial of treatment will become routine for certain categories of people.
As for me, I’m one of those who started having mammograms at 40 – and at 42 had my first biopsy – for a tumor I would never have found myself – it turned out to be benign – but I’ve not missed a year since and won’t. It’s too minor a preventive test to undergo to save something rather important to me – me.
Now, when are we going to see that expert medical report on why it’s totally unnecessary for men to have routine annual prostate exams? Now that would provoke a hue and cry!
- Sandy, Thornton
- Paul, Derry
This is only the tip of the iceberg, and beware everyone, there is more to come. The current administration is using this as a test run to halt other early detection tests for other cancers and diseases.
Getting back to the breast cancer issue, I'm absolutely shocked womens rights advocates, Oprah, morning television shows (The View), GMA, Today Show, you name it, isn't all over this.
From a Political standpoint this stinks. Just imagine this announcement when former President Bush was in office. You can just imagine the outrage from the media. I dare say Bush would be accused of killing women.
But with Obama in office, there is not even a whisper, anywhere, except on talk radio and the internet, or places like this.
I urge everyone to call, write, email, whatever you can to our federal, state, and local officials and express outrage.
To close, I find it very ironic that President Obama is out of country when this hit the news, and why isn't our First Lady chiming in on this???
- Harry, Atkinson
- Brian, Farmington
What if this orthodoxy resulted in a decree that mammograms could not be provided anywhere in a universal-coverage, single-payer system? What if such decrees were made for the stated purpose of reducing "national spending on health care"?
Even if Obama and our Congressional delegation knew what was in the bill, it would still be more than a flawed implementation. It is a bad concept--like the Soviet Union--the same concept, in fact, and there is no way to make it work for American citizens; nor impose it on us, except by deception.
- Spike, Brentwood NH
- Dee M, Manchester, NH
- Lauren, Boston, MA
Sacrifice the Elderly, Women and Children first.
- Lisa, Manchester
- Bob, Salem
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