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Rick Gibson's avatar

My other observation would be that cancer advocacy groups, including those that fund raise for cancer research, actually spend a lot of time and effort raising awareness of cancer and playing up the need for further research, which has the effect of making cancer seem more scary than it needs to be and downplaying all the progress that has been made over the past 50 years. One could argue that outfits like the Cancer Society actually have a vested interest in keeping cancer phobia going. Without it, their funding raising drops off.

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Margaret Peterson's avatar

Such a thoughtful piece. My aunt had "cancer" 15 years ago--a mammogram-identified DCIS, for which she was treated with whatever full-court press was recommended at the time. She was 70 at the time of her diagnosis; she's 85 now and doing fine, most likely because she was never sick to begin with. Meanwhile I've been refusing mammograms for the past 20 years (I'm 62), precisely because I do not want to be put in the position of being told I have DCIS and then having to accept or refuse treatment. I'm fine with this, and my older PCP was able to tolerate my decisions even though he would have preferred that I accept screening. Then he retired, and a year or two ago I started with a new, very young PCP (still a resident). She is frantic with worry over my refusal of screening, and I get the sense her preceptor is also frantic, or maybe furious, i.e., with me. Every time I see this doc (okay, it's only been twice) I give her the talk about overdiagnosis and overtreatment, but I can tell she's not listening to me. Sigh.

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