While this is not a real campaign, it represents the pinkwashing dilemma: does supporting breast cancer research make up for toxic products? Ad and caption from Johanna Björk's excellent essay on pinkwashing at http://www.goodlifer.com/2010/10/pink-ribbons-pink-products-pinkwashing/; reproduced by permission.
I’ve written about cancer previously in these pages. In Against Medical Advice, I recounted what I learned when someone I loved (I called her Bonnie) was diagnosed with breast cancer. In Poisoned, I traced Bonnie’s and my efforts, once her treatment was over, to identify the root causes of our cancer epidemic and comprehend why forty years of the “War on Cancer” have failed to dramatically reduce cancer rates. Finally, in Not Your Median Patient, I paid tribute to my two of my scientific idols, evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould and climate scientist Stephen Schneider, who applied their own scientific expertise and methods to understanding and fighting their own cancer.
One organization I commended in “Poisoned” was Breast Cancer Action for their efforts to eliminate the root causes of cancer in our environment. BCA’s seminal Think Before You Pink™ campaign urges consumers to resist buying pink-ribbon products from companies that actually worsen the cancer epidemic. BCA has recently stepped up their outreach, including a new blog and an informative monthly webinar series. For example, I learned in this month’s webinar that National Breast Cancer Awareness Month (NBCAM) was co-founded by the American Cancer Society and the pharmaceutical division of Imperial Chemical Industries. ICI is now part of pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca, which manufactures not only several breast cancer drugs but also the herbicide Acetochlor, a known carcinogen, thus profiting from both causing and alleviating cancer.
So I’m pleased today to reprint an essay by BCA’s communications manager, Angela Wall, about the need to go beyond breast cancer “awareness” (as if we’re not already aware of breast cancer) to identify and eliminate the toxins that cause it. If the beginning of wisdom is to call things by their right names, as the Chinese proverb says, then calling NBCAM “Breast Cancer Industry Month” is wise indeed. My thanks to Ms. Wall and BCA for permission to reprint her essay here.
Good News? Not So Fast …
By Angela Wall
Good news on breast cancer, says Sadie Stein writing for Jezebel. Why? Well, because of pink ribbon awareness campaigns more women are getting screened and diagnosed earlier. Hold on. Does this ring false to anyone else?
Awareness only got them to make a screening appointment to detect the cancer that was already developing.
Ordinarily, I celebrate an article that tacitly suggests that we’ve had enough pink awareness. I’d certainly celebrate the end of the pink noise and hypocrisy that accompanies breast cancer industry month because then instead of having our attention distracted by pink awareness campaigns, we could all start addressing the real issues that increase our risk of developing breast cancer and we might actually be able to focus on reducing diagnoses rather than celebrating them.
I doubt that’s going to happen though. There’s too much money to be made every October from slapping a pink ribbon on a product. Plus and the feel good rewards that accompany pink ribbons can really boost a company’s image regardless of whether or not the product being sold actually contributes to breast cancer. Heaven forbid we make consumers aware that the products they are purchasing actually contain ingredients that might cause cancer. Awareness apparently doesn’t need to go that far. It’s no surprise then that awareness never prevented anyone from developing breast cancer.
Awareness campaigns have never addressed why more white women get diagnosed with breast cancer but more women of color die from it. Awareness and pink ribbon campaigns have only ever distracted us. Awareness campaigns don’t demand we demand tighter state and federal regulations around the manufacturing and production of cancer causing chemicals or their being included as “ingredients” in the products we use to clean our homes.
I’ve never seen anything to celebrate about breast cancer and I certainly get deeply troubled by the idea that we might have done enough simply because people are being screened more regularly even though more cancer is being detected. Surely, screening rates are only to be celebrated when fewer people receive a cancer diagnosis.
I would agree that awareness has served its purpose. Now it’s time to demand that chemical corporations stop manufacturing products known to cause cancer. I would celebrate if Eli Lilly announced that they were stopping production of their cancer-linked recombinant bovine growth hormone (rBGH), which contaminates a third of US dairy products. I would celebrate if the FDA declared that rather than meeting with Roche Pharmaceuticals to reconsider approving Avastin as a treatment for metastatic breast cancer (despite evidence demonstrating that it doesn’t work), they refined their approval guidelines and insisted that treatments cost less, do more than existing options, and improve the quality of life of women with breast cancer who take them. So I think I’ll hold off on my celebrating if nobody minds until the studies start to show real systemic changes are reducing breast cancer diagnoses over the long term.
Breast Cancer Action's "Think Before You Pink™" campaign cautions consumers to resist buying pink-ribbon products from companies that worsen the cancer epidemic. Source: Breast Cancer Action.
Poisoned
By John Unger Zussman
When Bonnie was diagnosed with breast cancer almost two years ago, she was unwilling to chalk it up to random chance. She took it personally. “I wasn’t unlucky,” she said. “I was poisoned.”
Last month, I wrote about Bonnie (a pseudonym), her decisions about cancer treatment, and what I learned from watching her make them. Bonnie and I both appreciate the support, comments, and stories you shared after that post. Now I want to talk about what we learned from her quest to find out who, or what, poisoned her—like an infectedfilm-noir heroine who has just 24 hours to identify the poison, catch the culprit, and find the antidote.
It was in 1971 that President Nixon declared war on cancer, one of the few actions of his presidency that I applauded. Since then, many billions of dollars have been spent and millions of lives lost. We now have innumerable new treatments touted as “cures” for cancer. Yet cancer is still prevalent and survival rates have improved only slowly if at all (much of the decrease is attributable to reduced smoking and earlier detection). Post-menopausal breast cancer in particular is now common, and Bonnie is a member of a large and ever-growing community.
In my opinion (and Bonnie’s), the war on cancer has been undermined, like many wars, by a failure to cast the mission correctly. It placed all its reliance (and budget) on screening and treatment, on detecting cancers early and on finding a “cure.” And although it’s laudable to “race for the cure,” at some point you’ve got to wonder what is causing all this cancer.
But causation gets very little attention, probably because there’s a lot of money to be made in screening and treatment, but not so much in prevention.
How do we prevent cancer? An obvious place to start is our lifestyle, especially diet and exercise. The American diet is overloaded with fat, salt, and high-fructose corn syrup. We pig out on fast food and snack food while we sit on the couch watching “The Biggest Loser” and ignore the treadmill in the corner. Obesity is at record levels and increasing.
So is our diet predisposing us to cancer? Studies are suggestive. As Nicholas Kristof points out in a New York Times column called “Cancer from the Kitchen?,” most women living in Asia have low rates of breast cancer. But ethnic Asian women born and raised in the U.S.—including the daughters of Asian immigrants—have higher rates.
In a recent book called Anticancer, David Servan-Schreiber talks about the “terrain” of the body as being more or less hospitable to cancer. The idea is that cancer cells need a certain environment in which to flourish, and there are things we can do to make that more or less easy for them. For example, the antioxidants in certain fruits and vegetables, such as green tea, cabbage, and pomegranate juice, seem to antagonize cancer cells. “Eat your veggies,” it turns out, was not just maternal nagging.
This is not to say that green tea will cure cancer, and in fact, early studies of the impact of diet on breast cancer survival produced only mixed results. But a recent comprehensive study of diet and exercise—the Women’s Healthy Eating and Living (WHEL) study—was more definitive. For survivors of early-stage breast cancer, eating at least five servings of vegetables and fruits a day, and walking briskly for 30 minutes, six days a week, cut their risk of death from breast cancer by 50%! This should have made headline news—and would have if a drug company could have patented it.
(The link above is a summary, or you can read the actual journal report here.)
Now, Bonnie’s diet has always been reasonable. She hasn’t eaten fast food for 20 years, eats minimal snack food, and isn’t obese. Since her diagnosis, she eats more vegetables (especially the “anticancer” cruciferous ones like broccoli, cauliflower, and cabbage), less meat, little processed food, and no soda. This is far from being a burden. Bonnie’s a terrific chef, and the new meals are delicious.
But in her quest to prevent a recurrence or metastasis, Bonnie is focusing on a more insidious cause of cancer—carcinogens in our environment.
“A growing body of research documents myriad established and suspected environmental factors linked to genetic, immune, and endocrine dysfunction that can lead to cancer and other diseases.”
“Only a few hundred of the more than 80,000 chemicals in use in the United States have been tested for safety.”
“Weak laws and regulations, inefficient enforcement, regulatory complexity, and fragmented authority allow avoidable exposures to known or suspected cancer-causing and cancer-promoting agents to continue and proliferate in the workplace and the community…. Many known or suspected carcinogens are completely unregulated.”
Why is our world filled with toxic chemicals? Because it’s profitable. Because the corporations that put them there do not want to be troubled to clean up their mess. And neither do the legislators they bankroll.
What kind of chemicals are we talking about? Since we’re talking about diet, let’s start there. Commercially processed food—in additional to its fat, salt, and high-fructose corn syrup content—is full of additives, preservatives, artificial colorings, hormones, antibiotics, and pesticide residues. This is a result of our “modern” food system, which over the past 50 years has replaced family farms and conventional farming methods with factory farms, monoculture, overreliance on pesticides and fertilizers. If you have any doubts that mainstream food is poisoning us, check out the Oscar-nominated documentary, “Food, Inc.”
But the problem doesn’t end with what’s in the food and the way it’s produced; it’s also how it’s packaged, stored, and cooked. It comes to us in cans and plastic containers that contain bisphenol A (BPA) and leach phthalates and endocrine disruptors. We microwave it in the same plastic containers or cook it in Teflon pans that begin to degrade at cooking temperatures above 500° F. (In the case of microwave popcorn, we get both—the bags contain perfluorooctanoic acid, or PFOA, a known carcinogen related to Teflon.) We are living laboratories for artificial chemicals. Kristof’s column gives a good introduction to some of these toxins.
Now, not all of these chemicals are proved to cause cancer. But that’s the cancer panel’s point. Since the research hasn’t been done, it only makes sense to be wary of them. We are so concerned that the medications we take be both safe and effective, and the FDA generally takes a hard line at enforcing this. Why aren’t we (and they) equally concerned about food additives?
So, in Bonnie’s quest to transform her diet, the food she eats is almost less important than where it comes from. She now buys the vast majority of her (mostly organic) produce from farmers’ markets, and has found a local farm that raises natural lamb, pork, chicken, and eggs, without added hormones or antibiotics. She thinks it’s essential to avoid factory-farmed anything, since mass farming techniques use so many questionable chemical additives. She abandoned her non-stick skillet, bought glass containers for storage, and microwaves food in a Pyrex pie plate.
And she’s found that she has to be eternally vigilant. Tricks and traps are everywhere. For example, “fresh” orange juice from cartons, according to Alissa Hamilton, author of Squeezed: What You Don’t Know About Orange Juice, may have been picked and squeezed months earlier. It’s stored without oxygen, and then flavored with synthetically produced “flavor packs” produced by fragrance manufacturers. The manufacturers don’t have to label these additives because they’re made from orange byproducts.
But toxins aren’t just in food and our kitchen utensils; they’re also in our air, our water, our cosmetics, at work, and at home—they even find their way into newborn babies. As the Cancer Panel points out:
“To a disturbing extent, babies are born ‘pre-polluted.’ … [They] can be exposed to toxins in utero via placental transfer and/or after birth via breast milk. Tests of umbilical cord blood found traces of nearly 300 pollutants in newborns’ bodies, such as chemicals used in fast-food packaging, flame retardants present in household dust, and pesticides.”
The study they cite was conducted by the Environmental Working Group, one of the premier groups working to remove toxins from our environment. You can hear more about it in a recent address to the Commonwealth Club of California by Kenneth Cook, EWG’s president. You can listen to it for free here, or download it as a podcasthere or from iTunes.
It’s essential to become smarter, toxin-avoidant consumers, and the EWG website offers abundant helpful information. For example, you can find a series of tips for making your home a healthier place.
Companies that pollute the environment with carcinogens are particularly insidious when they present themselves as green—or pink. Breast Cancer Action, a small but effective activist organization, has focused on this “pinkwashing” problem with a campaign called “Think Before You Pink™” It urges consumers to resist buying pink-ribbon products from companies that actually worsen the cancer epidemic.
A recent and egregious example of pinkwashing is KFC who, in partnership with Susan G. Komen for the Cure, is now selling pink buckets of factory-farmed, fat-laden fried chicken to “cure breast cancer.” We expect this kind of deception from KFC, but the Komen foundation should know better. You can tell them to stop by sending a message from BCA’s site—and by not patronizing this product.
Since BCA first criticized the KFC/Komen partnership, outrage about the hypocrisy has gone viral. It was featured on The Colbert Report and has been roundly criticized by bloggers like John Robbins.
BCA successfully persuaded General Mills to stop putting the bovine growth hormone rBGH, a known carcinogen, in Yoplait yogurt. They are now trying to get Eli Lilly to stop manufacturing rBGH at all. Unlike other breast cancer organizations, they accept no donations from pharmaceutical companies, health insurers, or other companies whose products are involved in cancer diagnosis or treatment. They also accept no money from chemical manufacturers, oil or tobacco companies, or others who might possibly contribute to cancer incidence.
As Bonnie says, there are no certainties in life or cancer. No one can guarantee that eating organic food will keep you cancer-free. Bonnie relies on Western medicine and the guidance of doctors who are trained in it.
But she is not going to sit back and simply wait for them to cure her. She is also doing everything she can to strengthen her immune system and keep herself healthy. And that involves eating right, exercising, avoiding toxins, and supporting organizations that are trying to remove them from our environment. Nothing about this cancer epidemic is going to change unless we become proactive. Bonnie’s message to you is: Don’t wait until you get cancer to take responsibility for your own health.
Let me repeat the disclaimer from last month’s post: I am not a medical doctor, so my reflections are meant to be descriptive and not prescriptive. I wouldn’t pretend to tell anyone else what to do. Again, I invite your comments and, especially, your own stories.
My thanks to “Bonnie” for her input and inspiration.