Huffington Post article by Dr. Weiss
Comments
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I think a huge factor is individual vunlerability. I'm extremely sensitive to foods, meds and have many allergies. I grew a baseball-sized lipoma on my back within 2 weeks. (doc's all said this had to be growing for years and I just didn't notice it--but I've had confirmation from others who had seen my back that it wasn't there and then it was). At the time I had been on a dairy free diet for 6 months and then added milk back into my diet and boom--a benign tumor--I attribute it to the hormones in the milk I drank but I can't prove it. I just don't believe in co-incidences.
So I tend to think that even with good health practices, if our underlying individual vulnerabilities are low, we react to all the different toxins in our environment differently. Someone with a high tolerance to substances can be in a more toxic environment and never have any disease. I think it is one factor--not the only one. Throw in differing levels of stress, which impacts the nervous and immune systems and a combination can lead to differing results in various people (kind of a variation on the diathesis/stress model).
Before my first bout with cancer, I was in a very high stress situation, the second time--really no stress at all but I believe that having had chemo, it lowered my body's tolerance to environmental toxins.
I remember seeing some "news" show that tested chemicals in a "normal" family and another family that only ate organic and used "toxin-free" household chemicals. The amount of toxins and pesticides in both families were the same.
Just my 2 cents.
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I don't believe in the sugar theory either because all carbohydrates are converted to glucose after digestion, which is why before a PET scan, you are asked to limit carbs. So if this theory was true, how does the body differentiate "sugar" from other carbs? Is there a difference in the glucose made from sugars than from carbs?
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From an article on Dr Tuohy's vaccine from the research forum.
In the last year, nearly 210,000 new cases of breast cancer were diagnosed in the United States. Breast cancer is the second most common type of cancer among women, yet its cause remains generally unknown. In fact, 70 percent of all women with breast cancer have no identified risk factor.
http://www.clevelandclinic.org/health/chatreg/ChatPage.aspx?ChatId=1214
There it is in writing, so now we have an answer for those who want to blame us.
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Ruth:
Wonderful post - says it all!
Sandy
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Well said Ruth.
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Ruth
thank you - love your post! And lena, thank you too....I left off reading when things got, well, too "opinionated" for me - but good to come back and see such good humor, rants, and sense!
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ruthbru, What a wonderful posting! Fabulously said! Thank you for all of the time & thought that you put into your posting that tells it all like it truly is...Enjoy life!....Hope that you can enjoy a great sunset this evening!...Lisa
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When I was diagnosed, tons of information was being thrown at me and I had trouble remembering everything (luckily my DH did). But the one thing I do remember is my onc saying, "Bobbi, you did NOTHING to cause this to happen." Didn't change anything, but definitely helped me get through the days and nights for awhile.
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Ruthbru: Great post.
BaseballFan: Your doctor is right, you did nothing to cause this. I would like to tell that to everyone on this board.
Not all cancer is the same. If you have lung cancer, for instance, and you smoked, then it's a different story.
But, like Sheila pointed out in her post, most breast cancer cases have no known risk factor.
I am learning a lot about the "pink" movement. It seems there sometimes is a fine line between helping us and exploiting us for corporate gain and/or political agenda.
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A few years back I was at the San Antonio breast conference when one of the speakers was discussing metastatic treatments. The speaker had given a patient scenario and kept saying "and then she failed treatment x,.. went on treatment y and failed that after 6 months etc." One of the breast cancer advocates stood up and said, lets make things clear SHE didn't fail treatment, the treatment failed HER...if I hear one more physician or scientist stand up and say her cancer, or she failed, I'm going to scream. You could have heard a pin drop. There was just enough of a language difference the speaker just stood there and didn't know what to say.
Since then I've noticed how often things are phrased that way. It is medical lingo, I don't think they mean anything by it, but, it is demoralizing for those of us living this, and over time, I wonder if it does allow them to depersonalize.
This is my IMHO very opinionated subjective could be completely cracked opinion. I think with the focus shift to quality of life and survivorship, looking at rates of LE, chronic pain, neuropathy effects etc, the medical establishment at times feels on the defensive. Instead of concentrating on months lived,people are now reporting quality of months lived. The whole blamegame is backlash. Got LE? Not our operation, you're too fat and didn't weight lift enough. Got a recurrence? Not our choice of therapy you gained too much weight. Got chroinic pain? Not our treatment you're too anxious. Got chronic fatigue? Not our fault you didn't exercise enough.
The media understands weight, exercise etc in a way they'll never understand oncogene addiction, epigentic changes or DNA methylation, so they LOVE reporting on weight lifting and LE instead. Its a hot topic and the more the media reports it the easier the next grant comes and the more happy your bosses are given today's competition in the medical world, so the medical establishment will keep talking that way.
This is my answer to the medical establishment. We're the ones living it. I'll understand that sh-- happens and you're doing the best you can if you LISTEN to me, try to help me, and quit blaming me.
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brilliant post kmmd
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kmmd, I'd want to go further and take "fail" out altogether.
eg. Treatment x gained 6months before it stopped working.
That way it doesn't feel like a waste of time doing treatment x. Maybe the next treatment will give us longer.
Researchers are doing their best to find better drugs that at least extent life and one day may cure us. Doctors are trying their best to give us the most effective treatments.
That way we feel supported and hopeful rather than blamed or let down and hopeless.
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Brilliant post Kmmd - also Lena and Ruthbru.
Why don't we hear a quarter of this insight by advocates? We are stuck between fear, money, fear, indecision, fear, cheerleading, fear, playacting and fear. No wonder there is so little progress.
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Sheila, that is a very good point. Hadn't taken it that step further in my head, but, it does sound much more accurate and feels better that way
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Perfectly put!!! Didn't know why statements bothered me until it was pointed out this way. Just like here in Canada, it used to be called "Unemployment Insurance or UI". They changed it many years ago to be "Employment Insurance" or EI. Subtle difference, but oh, so important!!
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kmmd - thanks for your post!
awareness and education to both the medical community and the patients is so important. words can be powerful.
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