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January 21,
2008
from
Asiaing Website
Despite repeated
assertions by the National Cancer Institute (NCI)
that America is winning the war against cancer, the incidence of
cancer has escalated to epidemic proportions, striking most American
families.
Cancer now impacts about
1.3 million Americans annually and kills 550,000; 44 percent of men
and 39 percent of women develop cancer in their lifetimes.
While smoking-related cancers have decreased in men, there have been
major increases in non-smoking cancers in adults as well as
childhood cancers. Cancer incidence, besides mortality, is
disproportionately high among Black Americans.
A leading member of the
Congressional Black Caucus has expressed concerns as to the
grave implications of this racial imbalance.
Summary
Since passage of the
1971 National Cancer Act, the
overall incidence of cancer in the U.S. has escalated to epidemic
proportions, now striking about 1.3 million and killing about
550,000 annually; nearly one in two men and more than one in three
women now develop cancer in their lifetimes.
While smoking is
unquestionably the single largest cause of cancer, besides a risk
factor for some other cancers, the incidence of lung and other
smoking-related cancers in men has declined sharply. In striking
contrast, there has been a major increase in the incidence of
predominantly nonsmoking cancers in men and women, which is
disproportionately higher among Black Americans, and also in the
incidence of childhood cancers.
Nevertheless, the “cancer establishment,” the National Cancer
Institute (NCI) and American Cancer Society (ACS),
have repeatedly made misleading assurances of major progress in the
war against cancer for over two decades.
These culminated in
their 1998 Report Card, claiming a recent,
“reversal of an
almost 20-year trend of increasing cancer cases.”
However, this “reversal”
was minimal and artifactual.
Furthermore, in October
2002, NCI admitted to significant errors in underestimating its
published incidence data, apart from delays in reporting these data.
The escalating incidence of cancer does not reflect lack of
resources. Since 1970, NCI’s budget has increased approximately
30-fold, reaching $4.6 billion for 2003, while annual ACS
revenues are approximately $800 million.
Paradoxically, NCI’s
escalating budget over the last three decades is paralleled by the
escalating incidence of cancer.
Apart from basic research, the cancer establishment's mindset
remains fixated on “secondary” prevention or damage control -
screening, diagnosis, and chemoprevention (the use of drugs or
nutrients to reduce risks from prior avoidable carcinogenic
exposures) - and treatment. This is coupled with indifference to
primary prevention, preventing a wide range of avoidable
causes of cancer, other than faulty lifestyle - smoking, inactivity,
and fatty diet.
This exclusionary claim
remains based on a scientifically discredited 1981 report by British
epidemiologists, Drs. Richard Doll and Richard Peto;
Doll’s strong pro-industry record over recent decades is still
largely unrecognized. They guesstimated that lifestyle factors are
responsible for up to 90% of all cancers, with the balance
arbitrarily assigned to environmental and occupational causes.
For the ACS, this
indifference to primary prevention extends to hostility, compounded
by conflicts of interest with the giant cancer drug and other
industries.
Not surprisingly, The
Chronicle of Philanthropy, the nation's leading charity
watchdog, has charged that the ACS is,
“more interested in
accumulating wealth than in saving lives.”
These considerations are
more critical in view of the increasing domination of NCI policies
by the ACS.
In 1992, NCI claimed that its funding for prevention research was
$350 million, 17% of its approximately $2 billion budget; this claim
manipulatively included funding for “secondary” prevention.
However, independent
estimates, unchallenged by NCI, were under $50 million, 2.5% of its
budget.
In NCI’s 2001 $3.7
billion budget, $444 million, 12%, was allocated to “Cancer
Prevention and Control,” with no reference to primary prevention.
ACS “Environmental Research” funding in 1998 was $330,000, less than
0.1% of its $678 million revenues, apart from $873 million assets.
The U.S. cancer establishment conducts minimal research
on avoidable exposures to a wide range of industrial carcinogens
contaminating the totality of the environment - air, water, soil,
the workplace, and consumer products - carcinogenic prescription
drugs and “low dose” diagnostic medical radiation. As critically,
the cancer establishment has failed to warn the public, media,
Congress and regulatory agencies of such avoidable
exposures to industrial and other carcinogens,
incriminated in rodent tests and in epidemiological studies.
This failure to warn the public of cancer risks from avoidable
exposures to industrial carcinogens and ionizing radiation is in
striking contrast to the cancer establishment’s prodigious stream of
press releases, briefings, and media reports claiming the latest
advances in screening and treatment, and basic research.
This silence also violates the 1988 Amendments to the National
Cancer Program, calling for,
“an expanded and
intensified research program for the prevention of cancer caused
by occupational or environmental exposure to carcinogens..."
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