Guest guest Posted March 23, 2001 Report Share Posted March 23, 2001 ----- Original Message ----- From: " ilena rose " <ilena@...> <letter@...>; <wtnews@...> Sent: Friday, March 23, 2001 11:18 AM Subject: " An implant too far? " went way too far! ~ Response to Washington Times > Eleam > Letters Editor > The Washington Times > 3600 New York Avenue, NW > Washington, DC 20002-1996 > fax: 202/832-2982 > letter@...,wtnews@... > > To the Editor: > > Mr. 's is shown publicly prematurely congratulating France on > something that has not happened -- the lifting of the ban on dangerous > silicone gel implants. > > It appears that the silicone manufacturers and their PR corps have now > exported their disinformation campaign to Europe. > > Claiming that " Neither silicone gel nor implants using silicone are a threat to > health " ignores an enormous body of evidence which show that 2/3 women > with silicone gel implants have at least one rupture at 17 years. The > serious consequences often include additional surgeries, life threatening > infections, loss of natural breast tissue and necrosis. Over 200,000 women > have reported serious complications to the FDA which have threatened their > health. > > Please correct this irresponsible reporting. > > Ilena Rosenthal > Director: The Humantics Foundation for Women > Breast Implants: Recovery & Discovery > 1380 Garnet #444 > San Diego, CA 92109 > 858/270-0680 > > ~~~~~~~~ > > An implant too far? > s > Published 3/15/01 > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > > Are French health care authorities irresponsible - or are their > American counterparts simply mired in red tape, ignorance and politics? > > This is the question that springs to mind when one considers the news > that French authorities have lifted the ban on silicone gel implants while > here in America, the federal Food and Drug Administration continues to > peddle the line that silicone gel is dangerous and to be avoided. > > Either the French are crazy or the FDA has become politicized, using > its regulatory clout to deny Americans treatment options and scare them with > unscientific bogeymen about dangers that don't exist. > > So, which is it? > > If the exhaustive studies of the matter are any guide, the French are > not crazy. Neither silicone gel nor implants using silicone are a threat to > health. But this is not news - or shouldn't be. > > The most authoritative inquiry on the relationship, if any, between > silicone gel and reported illnesses was conducted by the Institute of > Medicine (IOM), an arm of the National Academy of Sciences, at the behest of > Congress last year. It did not get anywhere near the attention it should > have. > > Perhaps this was because the IOM's findings regarding silicone gel were > uniformly positive. The researchers found " no evidence that silicone > implants are responsible for any major diseases of the whole body " - > including the so-called " auto-immune " diseases alleged by trial lawyers > representing some women who had implants. Of the 1.5 million women who've > had breast implant surgery, fully two-thirds have said they are " very > satisfied " with their supposedly dangerous implants, according to the IOM. > > Unfortunately, a false connection was established by the lawyers > between the facts that some women who had implants later became ill in some > way. Yet the fallacy becomes obvious when one considers that in any group of > people, over a period of time, at least some will become ill or develop > maladies. But are these facts related? Not necessarily. > > The " cause " and " effect " are no more " connected " to one another than is > the crowing of the rooster to the rising of the sun each morning. > > It was this false relationship - between silicone gel and serious > diseases - that the IOM report (and many previous studies, including one > done by the New England Journal of Medicine) exposed. Those interested in > reading the facts for themselves can download the full text of the IOM > report at www.nap.edu on the Internet. > > Still, silicone gel and silicone implants continue to suffer from a bad > " rep " in the United States. There has been billion-dollar litigation, with > huge monetary awards - the lion's share of which has gone - you guessed it - > straight into the alligator skin wallets of trial lawyers. > > The bad " rep " is due in part to the media being spoon-fed false and > alarming misinformation by those very same trial lawyers - and also as a > consequence of the overzealousness of former Food and Drug Administration > (FDA) Administrator Kessler. It was Mr. Kessler who peremptorily > banned the gel implants back in 1992 on the same specious grounds as the > courtroom rants of the trial lawyers and their paid " expert witnesses. " > > For Mr. Kessler, like other political appointees before him, the > ginned-up hysteria enhanced his prestige as " protector of the public " - just > as other federal bureaucracies, such as the Environmental Protection Agency, > often overstate or even manufacture " problems " that only more money and > resources for the agency in question can solve. As regards the EPA, the > bogeyman of " global warming " (a theory based on hypothetical scenarios using > computer models, not actual data from the real world) is a prime example of > science taking a back seat to politics and bureaucratic self-preservation. > > As regards the FDA and Mr. Kessler, it never seemed to bother the man > too very much that he needlessly terrified tens of thousands of women - many > of whom are breast cancer survivors who had the implant surgery done for > reconstructive purposes following mastectomies - or that he set in motion a > legal feeding frenzy that established a dangerous precedent for future > shakedowns of private business by government. The lawsuits against the > tobacco and firearms industries being two cases in point. > > We all pay for the explosion in spurious litigation and > pseudo-science - in terms of higher prices, decreased innovation and, in the > case of medical products such as silicone gel implants, fewer treatment > options. No one's interests are served - except, of course, those of the > trial bar. > > The French, having reviewed the evidence, have wisely rethought the > ban on silicone gel. The health interests of women won out over fear and > hysteria. Hopefully U.S. health authorities will follow the example of their > " crazy " colleagues overseas. > > s is an editorial writer for The Washington Times and a nationally > syndicated columnist. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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