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There
is a link between
Abortion & Breast
Cancer
- What about the Muslim women in
the developing world! ITG
look into the link that
is being swept under the carpet. Also, latest
developments in genetic drugs to fight cancer,
diseases, disabilities but only for those who
are rich and live in the western world! We ask
what about the best nation brought to
mankind,i.e. the Muslims?
What
the Abortion-Breast Cancer Link
Means for Women in the Developing World

With a release of a new study in Great
Britain, evidence of a link between breast cancer
and abortion continues to mount. But who will
speak for women in the developing world, victimized
by abortion, who will endure untold suffering
from breast cancer in the years to come?
The news that breast cancer has now overtaken
lung cancer as the most common British cancer
came as a surprise to many. Not to Patrick Carroll,
however, the author of a new study from Great
Britain that links the huge increase in breast
cancer to the widespread practice of abortion.
Dr. Carroll's study demonstrates that abortion
actually doubles the risk of cancer in women.(1)
And the worst is yet to come. In England and
Wales the breast cancer rate is expected to rise
by over 2 per cent per annum between now and 2023some
60 percentamong women aged 45 to 49. The
total number of breast cancer cases for women
of all ages is expected to more than double over
the next 26 years. This is largely because, Dr
Carroll tells us, of the high rate of nulliparous
abortions, that is, of abortions performed on
women who have never carried a child to term.
"Perhaps as many as 50 per cent of the breast
cancer cases of the future will be attributable
to abortion," he concludes.
Professor Joel Brind, an endocrinologist at the
City University of New York who is perhaps the
world's expert on the abortion-breast cancer link,
praised the study for its scientific rigor. "Those
who undergo abortions clearly have an increased
risk, which can be precisely calculated, of contracting
cancer of the breast. We are talking about thousands
of cases of cancer over the next twenty years.
These are very sobering numbers."
"Out of 37 independently published studies,
28 show a causal connection," Brind said.
"And of those, 17 provide positive associations
that reach statistical significance suggesting
a 95-percent certainty that this association is
not due to chance. That is scientific evidence
which simply cannot be ignored."
Shortly after the publication of Dr. Carroll's
study came the news that an abortion doctor in
Australia had settled with a breast cancer victim.
The woman had sued the abortionist for not telling
her about research findings linking abortion to
breast cancer. Although a confidentiality agreement
prevents details of the settlement from being
released, Australian attorney Charles Francis
is confident that other cases can be brought against
abortionists on the same grounds. "It seemed
to me that the evidence [of an abortion breast
cancer link] was fairly strong," Francis
remarked, "certainly strong enough for a
good chance of winning."
Another suit involving the abortion-breast cancer
link is moving forward in Australia. "In
another case to be heard in New South Wales shortly,"
Francis said, " 'Mary' is suing a hospital
and an abortionist for failure to warn her that
she might subsequently have a bad psychiatric
reaction and for failure to warn of the increased
breast-cancer risk."
Other litigation is pending as well. Assisted
by the Thomas More Law Center, three California
women are suing Planned Parenthood to force the
nation's largest provider of abortions to reveal
scientific evidence of a substantial link between
induced abortion and increased risk of breast
cancer.
In the developed countries, despite access to
regular mammary exams and excellent treatment
regimens, many of those who develop breast cancer
will die. As Dr Carroll remarks of the British
situation, "Unless there is a major improvement
in treatment, including a reduction in the waiting-lists,
the number of women who die from the disease will
rise alarmingly."
In the developing world, unfortunately, this
grim picture grows much grimmer. Because of the
poor state of primary health care, women who get
breast cancer are unlikely to have it diagnosed
until it has reached an advanced stage. Those
who do have it diagnosed are unlikely to get treatment.
And even the lucky few who receive the relatively
unsophisticated treatments available are unlikely
to survive.
By promoting, performing, and lobbying for the
legalization of abortion, the International Planned
Parenthood Federation claims to be reducing "maternal
mortality." Yet "safe, legal" abortion
poses many dangers to the mother, not least of
which is a greatly increased risk of breast cancer
in succeeding years. And in the developing world,
breast cancer is a death sentence.
Endnotes

(1) Patrick Carroll, "Abortion and Other
Pregnancy-Related Risk Factors in Female Breast
Cancer," Pension and Population Research
Institute (PAPRI), 4 December 2001. Copies are
available from PAPRI at 35 Canonbury Road, London,
N1 2DG, UK.
Steve Mosher is the president of Population Research
Institute, a non-profit organization dedicated
to debunking the myth that the world is overpopulated
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