Thursday October 19, 2006


Oxford Study Denying Abortion-Cancer Link "Seriously Flawed" says Expert
OXFORD, UK, October 18, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Oxford scientists first covered up the abortion-breast cancer link with the publication of a 1982 study, and are at it again with another study released this week according to the Abortion-Breast Cancer Coalition (ABCC). The latest study is the fifth study by the university's scientists denying an abortion-cancer link.
In the first such study in 1982 Vessey et al., claimed, "The results are entirely reassuring, being, in fact, more compatible with protective effects (of abortion) than the reverse." The study, however, was deemed irrelevant because it included, as it admitted "only a handful of women" who'd had abortions.
The latest study, led by Gillian Reeves, conceded that childbearing reduces risk, but failed to compare the effect of having an abortion with the effect of having a full term pregnancy. "They covered up the substantial increase in risk associated with the loss of the protective effect of a full term pregnancy," says ABCC in a release.
Two breast cancer risks are associated with abortion - the loss of the protective effect of a full term pregnancy (the universally recognized risk) and the independent link (the debated risk). The study, Reeves et al., concerns only the second risk. The independent link addresses this question: Does the woman who has an abortion have a higher breast cancer risk than she would have had if she hadn't had that pregnancy?
By contrast, the first risk (omitted by Reeves et al.) has to do with this question: Does the woman who has an abortion have a greater risk than does the woman who has a full term pregnancy? Experts universally agree that the post-abortive woman does have a higher risk than does the woman who has a baby.
Professor Joel Brind, president of the Breast Cancer Prevention Institute, maintains that the methodology is "seriously flawed in the direction of covering up the link." Both abortions and breast cancer diagnosis were included right up to the same year - 2000. Many women were over 40 when abortion was legalized in their respective countries. Therefore, many younger women with recent abortions were compared to older breast cancer patients who were too old to have been exposed to legal abortions during most of their fertile years.
Brind said, "This sort of bad science is becoming disappointingly familiar. It is similar to the flaws in the Danish study, Melbye et al. 1997."
Reeves et al. is one of 28 studies with unpublished abortion data that had been included in a review of 52 studies for the journal Lancet in 2004. The review, Oxford's fourth attempt to cover up the link, is still used to mislead women about the cancer risk, says ABCC. Four experts criticized the review, independently of one another.
Last year, Dr. Brind authored a review of ten studies, including two Oxford papers. He concluded that they "embody many serious weaknesses and flaws" and "do not invalidate" the larger body of research supporting a link.
"Cancer researchers are supposed to be dedicated to protecting human lives, not serving the abortion industry," asserted Karen Malec, president of the Coalition.
SHARE THIS STORY:
E-mail
Print
Newsvine
Digg
Reddit
Del.icio.us
Facebook
Latest Headlines
- Lithuanian Government Bans EU Pro-Homosexual Tour Truck

- Promote Culture of Life and Catholic Teaching to Combat Rising Crime and Cultural Degradation: Lancaster Bishop

- Australian Woman Dies from Taking Birth Control Pill

- Is it True McCain "Got the Message" About not Running a Pro-Abortion VP?

- Freedom of Conscience for Ontario Doctors: Public Comment Extended to September 12

- Success with Re-growing Horse Ligaments Leads to New NIH Adult Stem Cell Centre

- Guatemalan Cardinal on Abortion: "It is just as serious to kill a 10 year-old child"

- MP Ken Epp responds to the Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada's Claims about Unborn Victims of Crime Bill

- Health Minister: Safe-Injection Sites a "Surrender to a Culture of Disease and Death."

- Indiana County Commission Upholds Regulations on Abortions under Criticism

- Statistics Canada Finds More Abstinence among Teen Girls in the Last Decade

- Exclusive: Retiring UK Bishop Reveals No Consensus among Brother Bishops over Same-sex Adoption

- California Supreme Court Rules Doctors Must Provide Treatment against Their Religious Beliefs

Most Read this Week
- Westminster Exorcist: Promiscuity can Lead to Demonic Possession
- Secret Meeting to Plot Global Abortion Strategy Exposed - UN Personnel Present
- Batman The Dark Knight - Should We Fear Imitation of the Joker?
- Massive Brazilian Vaccination Raises Suspicions of Covert Sterilization Program
- Niece of Martin Luther King Jr. to Lead Prayer Vigil Outside Largest U.S. Abortion Centre - Monday August 25
- Obama Caught Red-Handed in Abortion Lie
- New England Journal of Medicine: 'Brain Death' is not Death - Organ Donors are Alive
- HPV Vaccine Causes 21 Deaths and Counting - CDC Study Launched
- Traditional Fort Worth Episcopal Priests Seek Communion with Catholic Church
- Homeschooling Showdown in Brazil: Children to be Tested by Court in Battle Over Educational Rights of Parents
MORE NEWS:
LifeSiteNews.com Home Page
Last 10 Days
Archives
Special Reports
Copyright © LifeSiteNews.com. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivatives License. You may republish this article or portions of it without request provided the content is not altered and it is clearly attributed to "LifeSiteNews.com". Any website publishing of complete or large portions of original LifeSiteNews articles MUST additionally include a live link to www.LifeSiteNews.com. The link is not required for excerpts. Republishing of articles on LifeSiteNews.com from other sources as noted is subject to the conditions of those sources.


Back to Top