Abortion:
The "Best Predictor" of Breast Cancer
By Joel Brind, Ph.D.
The fall 2007
issue of the Journal of American Physicians and
Surgeons provides important additional
confirmation of the abortion-breast cancer link
(ABC link). This time, the study comes from an
unexpected source.
The Breast
Cancer Epidemic was produced by British actuary
Patrick Carroll, research director of the
London-based Pension and Population Research
Institute. Actuaries are in the business of
making forecasts of disease and death for the
insurance and pension industries.
Carroll's
study found that abortion is the "best predictor
of breast cancer" incidence in all eight
European countries he examined (England and
Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland, the Irish
Republic, Sweden, the Czech Republic, Finland,
and Denmark).
In his
Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons
article, Carroll employed the same mathematical
model for all of the nations that he had used in
a 1997 study that predicted with remarkable
accuracy the increase in breast cancer in
England and Wales from 1998 to 2004.
He took
all of the factors known to strongly affect the
risk of breast cancer and tracked them over time
in all eight countries, along with the incidence
of breast cancer. There were seven factors,
including age at first childbirth, number of
children (or no children), and abortion.
(And in
case you're wondering about the prevailing dogma
that most women who get breast cancer have no
known risk factors, see my article in the
October NRL News that debunks that myth.)
By
examining data on pregnancies, hormone use, and
breast cancer diagnoses for women born each year
back to the 1920s, Carroll found that the
strongest, most significant correlations were
between abortion and breast cancer in all the
European countries he studied. Deriving the
mathematical equations that fit the data, he was
then able to make accurate predictions.
Carroll,
who is also a statistician, predicts an overall
breast cancer increase of a whopping 50.9% in
the cancer rate for England and Wales by 2029,
due to high abortion rates and low fertility
(childbirth) rates alone.
By
contrast, smaller breast cancer rate increases
are predicted for the rest of Europe, where
abortion rates are lower.
Carroll's
study is comprehensive and enormously
impressive. In terms of European populations of
women, covering the last three decades of the
20th century (including women born within the
last seven decades of the century), Carroll
has--quite literally--done the math.
Carroll
was even able to find that abortion could
explain at least part of the heretofore
inexplicable "reverse social gradient" observed
in most of Europe--and the U.S., for that
matter: that more affluent women have a higher
incidence of breast cancer. That's because they
have more abortions, which increases the risk,
and have their children later in life, meaning
they do not enjoy the protection against breast
cancer that comes when a woman completes her
first pregnancy until later in life.
Why does
abortion increase a woman's risk of breast
cancer by an overall average of about 30%? After
puberty, a girl's breasts grow to adult size,
but they still consist almost entirely of
immature type 1 and type 2 lobules, the places
where almost all breast cancers start.
After 32
weeks gestation, however, most lobules mature
into cancer-resistant type 3 and type 4. This
explains why full-term pregnancy--in contrast to
abortion or premature birth before 32
weeks--permanently lowers a woman's long-term
risk of breast cancer.
There is
still another nagging question that Carroll's
work might raise in the context of the ABC link.
If the ABC link is already well established by
50 years of epidemiological research and decades
of biological research, why only now has this
important piece of the proof been provided?
Such
evidence as Carroll has provided has indeed been
popping up around the world for the last 20
years, but only now has someone put it all
together for many populations in a
mathematically rigorous way. For example, an
important piece of such correlational data
appeared in 1990. A study from the Soviet Union,
where abortion was legalized in the mid 1950s,
and quickly became the dominant means of birth
control, revealed a 200% increase in the Soviet
breast cancer incidence rate between 1960 and
1987.
Our own
National Cancer Institute (NCI) published its
2001 Annual Report to the Nation on the Status
of Cancer. In that year it focused on incidence
patterns of the five major types of cancer
between 1987 and 1998.
That study
revealed that, although cancer in men went down
3% per year, the overall cancer incidence rate
went up. Why?
Because it
went up slightly more than 3% per year in women.
A closer examination of the data showed that
virtually the entire increase in cancer was in
breast cancer among women under the age of 65 in
1998 (i.e., under the age of 40 in 1973 when
abortion was legalized on demand nationwide).
In other
words, the NCI found that virtually the entire
increase in cancer incidence during the last
decade of the 20th century could be laid at the
doorstep of Roe v. Wade.
Unfortunately, the NCI is still in denial,
apparently finding the ABC link to be a far too
inconvenient truth.
Patrick
Carroll, however, has seen fit to advise--in a
yet more recent paper he published in the
professional journal, The Actuary--that British
insurance actuaries adjust their premiums and
that health care providers plan their treatment
facilities to accommodate the forecast increases
in breast cancer.
Joel Brind,
Ph.D., is a professor of biology and
endocrinology at Baruch College of the City
University of New York, and editor and publisher
of the Abortion-Breast Cancer Quarterly Update.
He is a frequent contributor to NRL News.
Please
send your comments to
daveandrusko@hotmail.com.