Guest guest Posted July 12, 2003 Report Share Posted July 12, 2003 Great Stuff Misty Shawn - " Misty L. Trepke " <mistytrepke Saturday, July 12, 2003 4:39 PM [s-A] [ElectroHerbalism] Health Warning: Screenings May Be Dangerous > Comments? > Misty L. Trepke > http://www..com > > Health warning: screening can seriously damage patients > > See my earlier article > <http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/chris/2003/06/10/the_depths_of_decei > t_mammography.htm>The > Depths of Deceit Mammography for some salient background. > Particularly the effects of X-Rays. > > <http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/chris/>Chris > <http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/chris/>Gupta > --- > --- > ------------- > A story about cancer screening - they seem to finally recognize > that something's not right about their approach. The numbers tell. > > <http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/sepp/index.htm>Josef > > Health warning: screening can seriously damage patients Breast > cancer checks at centre of fresh controversy as concerns grow that > hi-tech clinics may harm those seeking to pre-empt illness By Jeremy > Laurance, Health Editor 11 July 2003 > > Hi-tech screening services, which promise to detect early signs of > heart disease, cancer and other conditions while they can still be > cured, are being introduced in Britain despite warnings from doctors > that they may do more harm than good. > > A new allegation that breast screening, one of the longest > established procedures, is being over-promoted to women who are not > being alerted to the harm that can result is published today in the > British Medical Journal. > > Regular mammography to check for breast cancer is an established > technology, backed by scientific expertise, which is popular with > patients. > > But debate continues to rage over whether it saves lives or prompts > unnecessary treatment. Hazel Thornton, a former breast cancer > patient and visiting fellow at the University of Leicester, and > Michael Baum, emeritus professor of surgery at University College, > London, and a long-time critic of screening, have teamed up with a > colleague to demand information for women that sets out the risks > and benefits. > > They cite evidence showing 1,200 women would have to be screened for > 14 years to save one life from breast cancer while during that time > scores would suffer anxiety, surgery and mastectomies for suspicious > lumps that turned out to be benign. > > The war over the risks and benefits of screening is likely to grow. > Clinics offering whole body scans, diagnostic tests and checks for > specific conditions such as skin cancer are springing up in London > and in other cities promising to provide clients with the " ultimate > health check " . > > At least four clinics have opened in the capital in the past three > months offering tests lasting from 15 minutes to two hours and > costing up to £1,000. Companies say the tests can reveal small > tumours, aortic aneurysms (defects in the wall of the main blood > vessel), bone erosion, artery deposits and osteoporosis (bone > thinning). > > Whole body screening is big business in America. Smart walk-in > facilities such as the Ameriscan Body Imaging Centre are based in > shopping malls and on high streets and are heavily advertised. They > promise an ultra-fast image of vital internal organs for a price of > about £650. > > The selling point of the scans is summarised in one company's > slogan: " You don't know what's inside until you look. " > Traditionally, doctors have performed health checks using the > thermometer, the stethoscope and their skill as diagnosticians. Now > the promise is that new technology will replace the application of a > sensitive touch and a listening ear. > > But British experts are sceptical. Richard Smith, editor of the > British Medical Journal, said a whole body scan had become a > fashionable gift in the US for people reaching milestone birthdays > of 50, 60 or even 40. " You might be giving your loved one the > supreme gift of extra years of life. Unfortunately, you may be more > likely to give him or her a lorry load of anxiety and a series of > invasive, painful and unnecessary investigations, " he wrote. > > The problem is that most scans throw up " abnormalities " but to > distinguish those that are benign from those that indicate serious > disease is often difficult. Dr Harvey Eisenberg, who runs a scanning > service in Newport, California, said he referred 80 per cent of the > clients he screened for further hospital checks. > > " Emerging pathologies are almost always present. In 25,000 patients > I have seen maybe 10 that were completely normal, " he said. > > Screening may wrongly indicate the presence of disease in some > patients > - > the " false positive " findings - causing them to have painful and > unnecessary investigations. An American patient who had a nodule > detected on his lung in screening described how he had a lung biopsy > to check for cancer, which revealed that the nodule was a healed > scar that was non-threatening. The investigation led to him spending > four days in hospital, enduring a painful procedure followed by > several weeks' recuperation and left him with a bill of $47,000 > (£30,000). > > Stephen Swenson, professor of radiology at the Mayo Clinic, > Rochester, Minnesota, said in the BMJ that screening for lung cancer > at his clinic as part of a study had detected 56 cases of the > disease over four years. " One could ask why screening should not be > advocated. Several uncertainties, however, make it premature to > advocate screening on a large scale, " he said. > > Although they found more early-stage lung cancers, what was unclear > was whether this would delay progression of the disease, even with > treatment, or whether the mortality associated with treating lesions > which might turn out to be benign outweighed the gain from > screening. Professor Swenson writes: > > " Some of the best doctors in the world have sincere differences of > opinion about such screening .... If patients simply want to get > scanned ... doctors should tell patients in explicit terms that such > screening has no proved benefit and that serious risks could > outweigh benefits (if there are any). Patients should understand > that the stakes are high. " > > In their paper on breast screening in today's BMJ, Ms Thornton and > Professor Baum say misconceptions on screening abound. Many people > wrongly believe screening reduces the incidence of breast cancer, > that all types of breast cancer progress and that early detection is > always a benefit. > > In fact, they say, screening contributes to a rise in the incidence > of breast cancer and one in five cancers detected is ductal > carcinoma in situ (DCIS), a type of breast cancer that may not > progress. In 40 per cent of cases, DCIS results in a mastectomy, > which may be unnecessary for the woman and expensive for the NHS. > > They claim there has been " negligible improvement " in NHS screening > leaflets because of the tension that exists with the screening > service's need to boost uptake. > > They conclude: " It is unacceptable that women taking tests continue > to suffer damage and regret because they found out the harms of > screening from experience. Unless women are able to make true > informed choices, funding for the service will continue to be > questioned. " > > A spokeswoman for the NHS Breast Screening Service said leaflets > given to women were revised in 2001 to provide balanced information > on benefits and limitations. " All women receive a copy of the > leaflet with their invitation to screening which sets out what > screening can and cannot do, " she said. > > Even the longest established form of screening in the UK - for > cervical cancer - is not immune to criticism. In a separate survey > in the BMJ, Angela Raffle, consultant in public health medicine in > Avon, and colleagues, calculated that 1,000 women would have to be > screened for 35 years to prevent one death. They point out that more > than 80 per cent of abnormal findings at cervical screening do not > progress to invasive cancer. > > " The same may well apply in other organs and the prophylactic > [preventive] removal of colons, ovaries, breasts and gullets may be > killing people without benefit, " they say. > > The rationale for screening - that we can nip diseases in the bud - > is now being adopted by companies to make fat profits. But > abnormalities are more common and difficult to interpret than people > think. Early detection can improve survival - but it may also mean > merely that patients spend more of their life with the knowledge > that they have a fatal disease. Sometimes it is better not to know. > > Screening tests > > Cervix > > Examining a scraping of cells from the cervix under a microscope can > reveal early changes, which may progress to cancer. > > Breast > > Mammography (an X-ray of the breast) can detect lumps in the breast > that may be cancerous while they are too small to be felt. > > Heart > > Blood tests measure cholesterol levels and ECG can measure the heart > rhythm. The ultimate test is angiography, in which X-rays of the > coronary arteries are taken after being injected with a radio-opaque > dye. > > Bowel > > Testing faeces for the presence of occult (hidden) blood can detect > signs of cancer. An internal examination using a flexible telescope > can check for polyps, small growths from the intestinal wall, which > may develop into cancer. > > Ovary > > An ultrasound probe inserted in the vagina or pressed over the > abdomen, combined with blood tests, may provide early warning of > cancer. Trials are being run to establish its reliability. > > Prostate > > Blood tests, with rectal examination, may indicate cancer. > > Lung > > A scan can detect nodules that may be early tumours. > > Bone > > A bone density scan can provide early warning of the bone-thinning > disease osteoporosis, caused by loss of calcium. > > The Independent > 11 July 2003 09:36 > > http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/chris/2003/07/12/health_warning_scree > ning_can_seriously_damage_patients.htm > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2003 Report Share Posted July 13, 2003 Interesting article on mammography. Last time I had that done - several years ago - I actually ended up with torn ligaments under my arm - never again will I have a mammography! Carol Misty L. Trepke [mistytrepke] Comments? Misty L. Trepke http://www..com Health warning: screening can seriously damage patients Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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