From
the Office of the Cancer Prevention Coalition
FROM PR NEWSWIRE CHICAGO 888-776-6551/ MTC BIO HEA
TO MEDICAL AND NATIONAL EDITORS:
Escalating
Incidence of Childhood Cancer Is Ignored by the National Cancer
Institute and
American Cancer Society, Warns Samuel S. Epstein, M.D.
And Quentin D. Young, M.D.
CHICAGO, May
9, 2002- /PRNewswire/ -- The following was released by Samuel S. Epstein,
M.D., Chairman of the Cancer Prevention Coalition and Professor
Emeritus of
Environmental and Occupational Medicine, University of Illinois
School of Public
Health, Chicago, and Quentin D. Young, M.D., Chairman of the
Health and
Medicine Policy Research Group, Past President of American Public
Health
Association, Chicago:
Since passage
of the 1971 National Cancer Act, launching the "War Against
Cancer," the
incidence of childhood cancer has steadily escalated to alarming
levels. Childhood
cancers have increased by 26% overall, while the incidence
of particular
cancers has increased still more: acute lymphocytic leukemia,
62%; brain cancer,
50%; and bone cancer, 40%. The federal National Cancer
Institute (NCI)
and the "charitable" American Cancer Society (ACS), the cancer
establishment,
have failed to inform the public, let alone Congress and
regulatory
agencies, of this alarming information. As importantly, they have
failed to
publicize well-documented scientific information on avoidable causes
responsible for
the increased incidence of childhood cancer. Examples
include:
-- Over 20 U.S.
and international studies have incriminated paternal and
maternal
exposures (pre-conception, during conception and
post-conception) to a wide range of occupational carcinogens as major
causes of
childhood cancer.
-- There is
substantial evidence on the risks of brain cancer and leukemia
in children
from frequent consumption of nitrite-dyed hot dogs;
consumption
during pregnancy has been similarly incriminated. Nitrites,
added to
meat for coloring purposes, have been shown to react with
natural
chemicals in meat (amines) to form a potent carcinogenic
nitrosamine.
-- Consumption
of non-organic fruits and vegetables, particularly in baby
food,
contaminated with high concentrations of multiple residues of
carcinogenic pesticides, poses major risks of childhood cancer, besides
delayed
cancers in adult life.
-- Numerous
studies have shown strong associations between childhood
cancers,
particularly brain cancer, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and
leukemia,
and domestic exposure to pesticides from uses in the home,
including
pet flea collars, lawn and garden; another major source of
exposure is
commonplace use in schools.
-- Use of
lindane, a potent carcinogen in shampoos for treating lice and
scabies,
infesting about six million children annually, is associated
with major
risks of brain cancer; lindane is readily absorbed through
the skin.
-- Treatment
of children with Ritalin for "Attention Deficit Disorders"
poses risks
of cancer, in the absence of informed parental consent.
Ritalin has
been shown to induce highly aggressive rare liver cancers
in rodents
at doses comparable to those prescribed to children.
-- Maternal
exposure to ionizing radiation, especially in late pregnancy,
is strongly
associated with excess risks of childhood leukemia.
It is of
particular significance that the cancer establishment ignored the
continuing
increase in the incidence of childhood cancer in its heavily
promoted, but
highly arguable, March 1998 "claim to have reversed an almost
20-year trend of
increasing cancer cases."
The failure of
the cancer establishment to warn of these avoidable cancer
risks reflects
mindsets fixated on damage control -- screening, diagnosis, and
treatment -- and
basic genetic research, with indifference to primary
prevention, as
defined by research and public education on avoidable causes of
cancer. For the
ACS, this indifference extends to a well-documented
longstanding track
record of hostility, such as supporting the Chlorine
Institute in
defending the continued global use of chlorinated organic
pesticides, and
assurances in the 2002 Cancer Facts and Figures that cancer
risks from dietary
pesticides and ionizing radiation are all at such low
levels as to be
"negligible." This indifference to primary prevention is
compounded by
conflicts of interest, particularly with the giant cancer drug
industry. Not
surprisingly, The Chronicle of Philanthropy, the nation's
leading charity
watchdog, has charged that: "The ACS is more interested in
accumulating
wealth than saving lives."
The minimal
priorities of the cancer establishment for prevention reflects
mindsets and
policies and not lack of resources. NCI's annual budget has
increased some
20-fold since passage of the 1971 Act, from $220 million to
$4.2 billion,
while revenues of the ACS are now about $800 million. NCI
expenditures on
primary prevention have been estimated as under 4% of its
budget, while ACS
allocates less than 0.1% of its revenues to primary
prevention and
"environmental carcinogenesis."
It should be
particularly stressed that fetuses, infants and children are
much more
vulnerable and sensitive to toxic and carcinogenic exposures than
are adults. It
should also be recognized that the majority of carcinogens
also induce other
chronic toxic effects, especially in fetuses, infants and
children. These
include endocrine disruptive and reproductive,
haematological,
immunological and genetic, for which there are no available
incidence trend
data comparable to those for cancer.
The continued
silence of the cancer establishment on avoidable causes of
childhood, besides
a wide range of other, cancers is in flagrant denial of the
specific charge of
the 1971 National Cancer Act "to disseminate cancer
information to the
public." As seriously, this silence is a denial of the
public's
inalienable democratic right-to-know of information directly
impacting on their
health and lives, and of their right to influence public
policy.
Whether against
cancer or terrorism, war is best fought by preemptive
strategies based
on prevention rather than reactively on damage control. As
importantly, the
war against cancer must be waged by leadership accountable to
the public
interest and not, as is still the case, special agenda private
interests. The
time for open public debate on national cancer policy is long
overdue.
SOURCE Cancer
Prevention Coalition 05/09/2002 /CONTACT: Samuel S. Epstein, M.D., Chairman
of the Cancer Prevention Coalition and Professor Emeritus of Environmental and
Occupational Medicine, University of Illinois School of Public Health,
Chicago, +1-312-996-2297, fax, +1-312-413-9898,
epstein@uic.edu
http://www.preventcancer.com /
Quentin D. Young,
M.D., Chairman of the Health and Medicine Policy Research Group, Past
President of American Public Health Association, Chicago, +1-312-372-4292,
info@hmprg.org
Web site:
http://www.hmprg.org /
CO: Cancer
Prevention Coalition ST: Illinois IN: MTC BIO HEA
SU: JR-AJ --
CGTH004 -- 2641 05/09/2002 11:00 EDT
http://www.prnewswire.com
Copyright 2002, PR
Newswire
For
More Information:
http://www.Healthy-Communications.com
Email to Shelley@Healthy-Communications.com
Los Angeles Chapter Director of the Cancer Prevention Coalition
_____________________________________________________________________________