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The Pill: “the largest unregulated human
trial that’s ever been conducted”
Birth Control Pill Link to Breast
Cancer
By Terry Vanderheyden
CHICAGO, March 7, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com)
– A world leader in cancer causes and
prevention has warned that the so-called
birth control pill is “the largest
unregulated human trial that’s ever been
conducted.”
Dr. Sam Epstein, author of Cancer-Gate:
How to Win the Losing Cancer War and
Professor of Environmental and
Occupational Medicine at the School of
Public Health, University of Illinois at
Chicago, told the CBC’s Marketplace that
exposure to the hormones estrogen and
progestin, as found in the pill,
increase breast cancer risk.
Marketplace author Wendy Mesley, herself
a breast cancer survivor, explained that
the World Health Organization’s
International Agency for Research on
Cancer last year re-classified hormonal
contraceptives as carcinogenic to
humans.
Dr. Chris Kahlenborn, M.D. demonstrated
that a woman who takes birth control
pills before her first child is born has
at least a 40 percent increased risk of
developing breast cancer and a woman who
has taken the pill for four or more
years prior to the birth of her first
child has a 72 percent risk factor in
developing breast cancer. Dr.
Kahlenborn’s book, “Breast cancer: Its
link to abortion and the birth control
pill,” published by One More Soul, is
based on six years of study and a
meticulous analysis of hundreds of
scientific papers and other sources.
A European study, which looked at
103,000 women aged between 30 and 49 in
Norway and Sweden found the risk of
developing breast cancer rose by 26% for
women who had taken the pill over those
who had never used it. Moreover, women
who had used the pill for long periods
of time increased their risk of breast
cancer by 58%. The study also found that
women over 45 still using the pill had
an increased risk of 144%.
The British Medical Journal revealed
that the pill increases a woman’s risk
of developing cerebrovascular disease by
1.9 times while increasing the tendency
to cervical cancer by 2.5 times. The 25
year follow-up study with 46,000 British
women also noted that the enhanced risk
of death lasts for 10 years after women
have stopped taking the pill.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Terry Vanderheyden is a reporter for
Life Site News. This article
copyright Life Site News
www.lifesitenews.com.
Permission to republish is granted.
This article originally published
Tuesday March 7, 2006
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