quarta-feira, 14 de novembro de 2007

Media Ignore Major Insurance Report Stating Abortion is "best predictor of breast cancer"

Companies advised to adjust insurance premiums in light of 50% increase in breast cancer to 2029

The mainstream media have again almost totally ignored a new study published in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons that found that abortion is the "best predictor of breast cancer" in eight European nations.One notable exception to this media black-out however is an article by Dennis Byrne of the Chicago Tribune, who wrote a commentary entitled, "Snubbing cancer study will only hurt women: Research showing link to abortion ignored by media."
Read the article here: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-oped1022byrneoct22,0,1439666.storyKaren Malec of the Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer said: "The media's behavior is very problematic. When the history books are written on the abortion-breast cancer link, women are going to be appalled by the major media's behavior on this matter and the media will suffer further lose of credibility.""The mainstream media have aggressively promoted abortion, and the abortion-breast cancer link would mean that more of their readers are getting breast cancer because they believed what the media were telling them."

The usual argument used by critics of abortion-breast cancer link studies is "recall bias", which claims flawed research due to it being based on interviews with women who have breast cancer and admit to having had one or more abortions.
This study by Patrick Carroll, a statistician and actuary, is not affected by "recall bias" because it is based on data from several countries that have complete and accurate abortion records and not on patient interviews.
After the study was published, critics attacked the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, saying the research was politically motivated.
"It was a shoot the messenger approach," explained Karen Malec, "because science really is not on their side, so they argued ideology."
More significantly, this research was discussed in the insurance magazine "The Actuary." Insurance actuaries were advised to adjust their insurance premiums and reserves accordingly in order to plan for a 50% increase in breast cancer projected out to 2029.
Malec continued, "The abortion-breast cancer link critics arehaving a hard time explaining why an insurance magazine would publish a "politically motivated" article discussing the abortion-breast cancer link and advising its readers that this epidemic will be costly for the insurance industry and consumers. Insurance companies, after all, are in the business of making money and pleasing their stock-holders, not in dealing with politically motivated issues."
"For people who don't know who to believe, when the insurance industry starts talking about the issue then we know its a serious\nproblem," Malec concluded.
Link to Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer:

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