 |  | 

The Pink-Ribbon Trap
Breast cancer activism has to go beyond simply encouraging women to get
mammograms and joining support groups.
By BARBARA EHRENREICH and BARBARA BRENNER
December 23 2001
LA Times
For almost a decade, American women, along with their families and friends,
have marched, run, hiked and even climbed mountains in the name of
breast-cancer "awareness. " They have affixed pink ribbons to their lapels
or worn special breast-cancer-themed garments like the Ralph Lauren pink
pony T-shirt. They have distributed and displayed hundreds of breast
cancer-related tschotchkes, from pink teddy bears to breast cancer
awareness bank checks.
One goal of all this activism has been to raise
money for breast-cancer research, but the larger, more diffuse, aim is
always "awareness": getting out the message that "early detection saves
lives" and that the best means of detection is the annual screening
mammogram, or, as Rosie O'Donnell puts it, going out and getting "squished.
" So it must have come as a shock to most of America's grass-roots
breast-cancer activists that a Danish study, reported in the Oct. 20
Lancet, found no evidence that routine mammography reduces the death rate
from breast cancer. There will be continuing debate and no doubt--given the
American medical establishment's huge financial investment in mammography
screening--sharp attacks on the Danish study.
But this is not the first
major study to challenge the dogma that mammography is our first and best
line of defense against the disease. It was five years ago, in 1996, that
David Plotkin, director of the Memorial Cancer Research Foundation of
Southern California, concluded from a review of studies available then that
the benefits of routine mammography are "not well established; if they do
exist, they are not as great as many women hope."
True, mammography may, in some cases, detect tumors at an earlier and more
treatable phase than that at which they might otherwise have been
discovered. One of us was diagnosed by mammography, and, as a result,
possibly treated at an earlier phase of the disease than she might have
been otherwise.
But the mass mammographic screening of healthy women has
significant downsides, too. For one thing, not all cancers are detectable
by mammography --as the other of us knows too well from her own diagnoses.
Twice, she found tumors through breast self-examination that recent
mammograms had missed. And for every breast cancer that is detected by
mammogram, there are two to four false alarms: so-called "bad" mammograms
leading, unnecessarily, to anxiety-producing and sometimes disfiguring
surgical biopsies.
Furthermore, mammography carries its own risks, as a woman can't help but
note when the mammography technician dashes for shelter behind a lead
shield before flicking on the machine. It has to be the ultimate irony that
the technology we rely on to detect breast cancer utilizes ionizing
radiation, which is, at this point, also the only well-established cause of
breast cancer.
But perhaps the most insidious effect of our mass reliance on mammograms
has been to induce a dangerous complacency about current medical approaches
to breast-cancer treatment. Implicit in the drumbeat for regular mammograms
was the promise that your cancer could be cured--if only you bring it to
the doctors' attention early enough. But not all small tumors are "early"
and more easily treated.
Worse, current treatments--surgery, chemotherapy
and radiation--carry no guarantee of long-term survival and are notoriously
debilitating and disfiguring themselves. Every year, more than 40,000
American women die of breast cancer, large numbers of whom had duly
submitted to screening mammograms and to the nightmarish treatments that
ensued.
It's time to admit that, contrary to the promotion for mammograms, the
disease is not always treatable, no matter how "early" detection takes
place. In fact, we should probably stop talking about "breast cancer" as if
it were a single disease. There are many forms of breast cancer. Some are
highly treatable, others are not.
The emphasis on mammograms has put the burden of fighting the disease
squarely on women themselves: Have your mammograms, or it's your own fault
if you end up with an advanced case of breast cancer.
Beyond that, women
are often made to feel that the outcome of their treatments depends on
their attitude--an idea derived in part from a 1989 study showing that
breast-cancer support groups gave women with metastatic disease both a more
optimistic outlook and a 25% increase in longevity.
But a new, larger and
more definitive study published on Dec. 13 found that participation in
support groups adds nothing to a patient's life expectancy. While sharing
experiences can be psychologically helpful, we need to understand that a
good attitude won't cure the disease, and a bad attitude won't accelerate it.
Most women would like nothing better than to have more control over the
detection and course of their disease. But it's beginning to look like
there's not much we can do as individuals.
What we can do is band together
to demand better treatments, more research into the causes of the disease
and more reliable methods of detection. On the detection front, there is
one piece of good news: A recently completed clinical trial in Canada
showed that low-tech, manual breast exams by trained medical providers are
at least as likely to save lives as mammograms.
But it will take a major
paradigm shift to wean the American breast-cancer establishment away from
its reliance on mammograms, and this is unlikely to happen unless and until
American women demand it.
What we really need, then, is a new kind of breast-cancer activism. Today
we are all fully "aware," thank you very much, and the time has come for a
more outward-looking approach, one that shifts the burden back onto the
medical and scientific establishment.
A newly invigorated breast-cancer
movement will not be as pink and cuddly as the one it replaces; it will be
angry and shrill at times. But that's how the breast-cancer movement began
10 to 15 years ago--with protests and marches to demand more research and
less damaging forms of treatment.
We didn't abolish the most savage form of
breast-cancer surgery--the Halstead radical mastectomy--or win women the
right to participate in their treatment decisions by "racing for the cure"
or wearing pink ribbons.
Yes, it's hard to relinquish a comforting faith, such as the one the
mammography dogma represented. But we all live with uncertainty every
day--or certainly have for the last several months.
Women can, and must,
face up to the failures of breast-cancer detection and treatment methods if
we are to mobilize effectively against the epidemic.
*
Barbara Brenner is the director of Breast Cancer Action in San Francisco.
Barbara Ehrenreich is the author of "Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By
in America."Women are often made to feel that treatment outcomes depend on
their attitudes.
|
Remember we are NOT Doctors and have NO medical training.
This site is like an Encylopedia - there are many pages, many links on many topics.
Support our work with any size DONATION - see left side of any page - for how to donate. You can help raise awareness of CAM. |
|