Rouser2 said:Originally posted by Yahweh [/i]
>>I am perfectly aware mammograms may miss tumors, but for every tumor they miss, they find 20 others
And many of the cancerous tumors they "find" do not exist.
-- Rouser
[hugs my momma bug_girl]bug_girl said:Yahweh, i want to adopt you.![]()
Response: Wilful ignorance to the n<sup>th</sup> power.Rouser2 said:Originally posted by Zep [/i]
>>After all, most of these mamograph screening programs are paid for by governments out of taxes, and the health budgets are notoriously placed at the bottom of the out-basket. Which means there has to be a really, REALLY good scientific case to be made to get the pollies to cough up even the tidbit of cash they have so far to make the screening possible. And if it EVER proved to be ineffective, I'm sure the money supply would dry up (have dried up) instantly.
Comment: Naivete squared.
-- Rouser
Humility, dear Rouser, salvage your humility by not making such ignorant utterences.Rouser2 said:The US government does it all the time. I suspect so does the Austrialian government. Need has little to do with it. But greed, everything to do with it.
-- Rouser
Good, you acknowledge mammograms find many many more tumors than they miss, which is much much better than finding none by refusing to get a mammogram, so we are in agreement.Rouser2 said:Originally posted by Yahweh [/i]
>>I am perfectly aware mammograms may miss tumors, but for every tumor they miss, they find 20 others.
Duh????
The amount of radiation, as wipeout pointed out, is about as dangerous a few Brazil nuts.Mammograms may save some lives, but they also kill. The question is, do they save more than they kill?
The little tidbit regarding "mammograms do indeed cause more cancer deaths than they prevent" is where I'd put my money on "extremely false", and perhaps a little change on "No mortality benefit from mammograms at all"."Extremely false data??? How so?

Yahweh said:
No, big gummermant is not out to get us.
You really DON'T have a clue, do you!Rouser2 said:posted by Zep [/i]
>>No government of any flavour is going to fork out for more health benefits than they can afford to keep the people happy.
The US government does it all the time. I suspect so does the Austrialian government. Need has little to do with it. But greed, everything to do with it.
-- Rouser
Rouser2 said:Originally posted by The Don [/i]
>>So checking whether there was a balance of benefit was outside the scope of their study
quote:
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Benefits include the earlier detection of cancers by radiological examinations and the possibility of early treatment, which probably allows more cure of cancers than radiological exposure is able to cause.
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>>But of course this is just an assertion because checking whether there was a balance of benefit was outside the scope of their study
But I provided that balance in reference to the Danish study of 2000 which studied several of the major, but flawed previous studies. No mortality benefit from mammograms at all.
-- Rouser
Women who get regular mammograms could reduce their risk of dying from breast cancer by 28 percent
Rouser2 said:*snip*
On the contrary, it is the Cancer Research Establishment
The what? Cancer research is done at hundreds of independent institutes distributed in numerous countries
which minimizes prevention in favor of ever seeking the magic bullet "cure".
Yeh, that explains why we have a new "this causes cancer" scare every week.
And the notion that conventional medicine such as x-rays and other radiation treatments as well as chemotherapy in fact causes cancer is indisputable.
Rouser: BREATHING causes cancer. This is indisputable. I suggest you lay it off.
-- Rouser
Rouser2 said:Originally posted by The Don [/i]
>>Like the Swedish study
http://www.medtech1.com/new_tech/ne...ature.cfm/117/1
which indicates that
quote:
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Women who get regular mammograms could reduce their risk of dying from breast cancer by 28 percent
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28 percent of what? No indication here as to whether the stated percentage is "relative" or "absolute,", is there???
-- Rouser
29 out of a total of 21,164 breast cancer cases MAY have been caused by screening