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Women who have had an abortion are up
to twice
as likely to suffer from breast cancer.
In the first study of its kind in Britain
researchers said the risk of breast cancer is significantly
increased if a woman has undergone a termination of pregnancy.
The study, which looked at breast cancer
and abortion rates in Britain, Finland, Sweden and the Czech
Republic, draws a direct link between rising cases of breast
cancer and an increase in abortion since it was legalized.
The research, by the Populations and Pensions
Research Institution, an independent group of statisticians,
suggests that up to 50 per
cent of breast cancer cases in England and Wales over the
next 26 years will be "attributable to abortion".
Launching the study, which was funded
by the anti-abortion charity Life, Professor Joel Brind of
New York's City University and director of the Breast Cancer
Prevention Institute in New York, insisted it was intellectually
watertight.
He said: "Women are at risk and
they do not really know about it. They certainly don't seem
to be finding out about it from the NHS.
"This implicates a risk factor that
is a matter of choice. Simply undergoing the procedure once
measurably increases the risk of breast cancer.
"We are talking about thousands of
cases of breast cancer over the next twenty years. This is
a very sobering statistic."
Researcher and author Patrick Carroll
said the total number of breast cancer cases is expected to
more than double from 35,110 in 1997 to 77,000 in 2023.
The rise was largely because of abortions
carried out on women who have not yet had a baby,
Carroll said.
"Breast cancer incidence has risen
... in parallel with rising abortion rates. There is no doubt
there is a causal relationship," he said.
"Perhaps as many as 50 per cent of
these cases will be attributable to abortion and unless there
is a major improvement in treatment, the number of women who
die from the disease will rise alarmingly."
Prof Brind said a surge in levels of the
hormone oestrogen in the first three months of pregnancy by
around 2000 per cent is the most likely mechanism for increasing
risk in women who subsequently undergo a termination.
Life seized on the research findings to
assert that abortion is psychologically and physically dangerous.
Professor Jack Scarisbrick, chairman of
Life, said: "We accuse the government and the medical
establishment of persistent refusal to take seriously the
mounting evidence that abortion is a significantly independent
risk factor for breast cancer."
NineMSN
December 6, 2001
Comment
from Gene Rudd, MD, Christian
Medical Association Associate Director
While not all studies confirm a causal
link, there is growing and alarming data to suggest that elective
abortion increases a woman's chance for breast cancer. Sadly,
personal bias and political agendas too often overshadow a
critical review. For now, I believe there is sufficient data
to make this an issue of informed consent, public awareness
and research priority.
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