Guest guest Posted January 1, 2003 Report Share Posted January 1, 2003 Unnecessary Mastectomies By Regush ABCNews.com Oct. 27 — It's time for some hard answers from breast cancer specialists an= d surgeons. They've been sitting on a powder keg issue concerning the health= of women for far too long. While we hear news almost daily of the need for women to have mammograms an= d to inspect their breasts for changes that could suggest breast cancer, the= actual treatment for breast cancer that many women receive, especially poor= ones, is often outrageously out-of-date, if not bordering on the criminal. An article published this month in the Journal of the American Medical Wom= en's Association provides a summary and analysis of key studies on breast c= ancer treatment and raises serious questions about medical conduct. Poor Get Poor Medical Advice According to the medical review by Zuckerman, the author of the journ= al article and head of the Washington, D.C.-based National Center for Policy= Research for Women and Families, many women are getting their breasts remov= ed for no good reason — meaning that such decisions are often not based on s= ound medical judgment but more on the basis of other factors, such as a woma= n's income, the training of her doctor and where she lives. For instance, if a woman is poor, chances are good that she'll have a maste= ctomy rather than a lumpectomy (removal of the cancer but not the breast.). = It's cheaper to remove a breast. Lumpectomies also require follow-up radiati= on. In Texas, for example, a study of breast cancer treatment at one large urba= n hospital revealed that 84 percent of the women with early stage breast can= cer had mastectomies and only 16 percent had lumpectomies. The women who los= t their breasts were mostly poor. Other Treatments Exist, But Are Costly If a doctor was trained before 1981, his patient is much more likely to hav= e a mastectomy. Obviously old medical habits die hard. Research is clear that lumpectomies are as safe as a mastectomy for most wo= men with early stage disease. The offending doctors should be hauled in front of a medical inquiry. They = are needlessly disfiguring women and causing them to endure possible further= problems, including pain and illness, associated with breast reconstruction= , which can involve risky breast implants. Studies show that this appalling trend to perform mastectomy exists in most= parts of the country. You have to wonder what type of information many women are receiving from t= heir doctors and why they agree to radical surgery. " Limited information and biased recommendations are undermining breast canc= er patients' choices, " says Zuckerman. " After all the research that has been done, why are so many women undergoin= g mastectomies they don't need? " Not Discussed, Though Known An excellent question. Why is it that performing unnecessary mastectomies i= s not a priority question in women's health care? Where are the activists to challenge this medical stupidity? Where are the women's groups that are engaged in educating women to examine= their breasts? Is this subject matter a little too confrontational for them? Is breast sel= f-examination a gentler and kinder issue? Both activists and the medical establishment should be condemned for their = silence. And it wouldn't hurt to have a little more media attention focused = on this issue. Come on medical reporters. It's really not that complicated a= story. Let's get our priorities straight on treatment for breast cancer. This butchery must stop. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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