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Features » December 15, 2006

Seeing Red about Thinking Pink

The “pink” slogan behind National breast Cancer Awareness Month has become consumer-oriented and emphasizes an individualistic approach to healthcare.

By Lucinda Marshall

Along with the traditional browns and tans of falling leaves and Thanksgiving turkeys, each autumn’s colorscape now includes a jarring bubblegum pink. October marked the 24th year of National Breast Cancer Awareness Month (NBCAM), which is sponsored by the AstraZeneca HealthCare Foundation along with numerous other organizations, medical associations and government agencies.

Breast cancer is the poster child for cause marketing: There is no other disease we try to eradicate by going shopping. Too often, however, the solution and the problem are commingled.

Who can resist pink M&M’s or Oreo cookies with little pink ribbons, for example? Never mind that junk food makes our bodies more vulnerable to disease. Estée Lauder donates money from the sale of its Elizabeth Pink lipstick; unfortunately it contains parabens, a chemical class that has long been linked to breast cancer. BMW will make a donation to the Susan G. Komen Foundation when you test-drive one of their vehicles and Ford Motor Company donates the proceeds from its Warriors in Pink line of clothing to Komen, an organization that supports breast cancer research and community outreach programs such as the Race for the Cure. The vehicles of both companies, however, continue to spew out carcinogen-laden exhaust. These examples and more are detailed online at www.thinkbeforeyoupink.org.

This commercialization of breast cancer does not always sit well with those it supposedly benefits. “We don’t see little penis trinkets being sold to ‘support prostate cancer awareness,’ now do we?” asks Jaynse Ashley, 56, a social worker who has undergone three surgeries for breast cancer. “I cannot adequately articulate how disgusting I find the marketing of trinkets, appliances, etc. on the backs of those of us in this battle. There will be a reckoning and I hope I live to see it.”

The prevailing consumer model for finding and financing a cure also reinforces the message that individuals are solely responsible for their own health. Much of the information spewed out in October focused on personal risk factors that we can’t change, such as genetics and family history. The Web site of the American Cancer Society (ACS), www.cancer.org, devotes its entire explanation about what causes breast cancer to genetic factors, despite the organization’s own admission that only 5 to 10 percent of breast cancer is hereditary. Only one paragraph in their discussion of risk factors is given to environmental pollutants, because, according to ACS, “Currently, research does not show a clear link between breast cancer risk and exposure to environmental pollutants such as the pesticide DDE (chemically related to DDT), and PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls).”

Yet according to Breast Cancer Action (BCA), a nonprofit patient advocacy group, more than 100,000 synthetic chemicals are currently in use in the United States—more than 90 percent of which have never been tested for their impact on people. A new study by the World Wildlife Fund links pollutants to breast cancer through what researcher Andreas Kortenkamp terms the “cocktail effect” of exposure to multiple chemicals that mimic estrogen.

As “State of the Evidence 2006: What is the Connection Between the Environment and Breast Cancer”—a report published jointly by BCA and the Breast Cancer Fund—points out, “many factors that contribute to the disease lie far beyond an individual’s personal control and can only be addressed by government policy and private sector changes.”

We spent another October racing our little legs off yet again, but instead of a cure we are left with many unanswered questions—not just about breast cancer’s causes, but also how to detect and treat it.

While mortality from breast cancer is falling at a 2.3 percent annual rate in the United States, incidence of the disease continues to increase at a rate of 1 percent. Almost 10 percent of breast cancer deaths worldwide are in the United States, despite the country’s aggressive detection protocols. Organizations such as the American Cancer Society and the Komen Foundation advise American women to get annual mammograms starting at the age of 40. In contrast, England, Canada and Australia recommend routine mammograms only every few years after the age of 50, and not at all for younger women unless there is a specific cause for concern.

Recent research by the Nordic Cochrane Centre in Denmark questions the effectiveness of mammography. In a study of 2,000 women, they found that while one woman would have her life prolonged, 10 would undergo unnecessary treatment and 200 would experience unnecessary anxiety because of false positive results.

According to ACS’s Director of Breast Cancer and Gynecological Cancers, Debbie Saslow, ACS’s recommendations are based on modeling and inferential studies of the available data such as the speed at which breast cancers are likely to grow. She admits, however, that there is no study that confirms that annual mammograms are more effective than mammograms given every couple of years.

And, what’s worse, companies such as General Electric and DuPont, which manufacture mammography equipment, and make generous donations to organizations such as Komen and ACS, also make products that have been linked to cancer. DuPont’s Teflon coating—which is used on many products, including non-stick cookware—is made with perfluorooctanoic acid, or PFOA, a chemical linked to cancer by the Environmental Protection Agency. General Electric is a builder of nuclear power plants that produce radiation, a known carcinogen. Both DuPont and GE have been sued for injuries and illnesses caused by the deliberate release of radiation at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation.

The standards for treatment of breast cancer also raise questions. Until recently, virtually all women with breast cancer underwent chemotherapy despite the fact that, according to Associated Press Medical writer Marilynn Marchione, of those who receive chemo, only 15 percent will benefit, 25 percent will get worse and 60 percent didn’t need it in the first place. Recent research published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute has also found that the side effects of chemo are much greater than previously known.

AstraZeneca, maker of the estrogen-blocking drug Tamoxifen, is the primary corporate sponsor of National Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Like other pharmaceutical companies, the company supports the American Cancer Society and the Komen Foundation. The financial interest of such companies clearly lies more in finding a drug “cure” than in addressing the environmental causes of the disease or promoting the benefits of lifestyle choices. Exercise, for example, has in numerous studies been shown to lower hormone levels and thus reduce the chance of getting or dying from breast cancer by as much as 60 percent.

Breast cancer patients deserve a national policy that emphasizes further research into the causes of breast cancer, and bases standards of treatment and diagnosis on the health of patients, not the bottom line of corporations. It is time to move beyond “awareness” to demanding answers.

Lucinda Marshall is a feminist artist, writer and activist. She is the Founder of the Feminist Peace Network. Her work has been published in numerous publications in the U.S. and abroad including, Counterpunch, AlterNet, Dissident Voice, Off Our Backs, The Progressive, Countercurrents, Z Magazine, Common Dreams and Information Clearinghouse. She blogs at WIMN Online.

More information about Lucinda Marshall
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  • Reader Comments

    We really should see more of what we are trying to save. A topless walk for saving breasts would be a wonderful way to raise money, consciousness and, um, you know. . .

    Posted by wolf on Dec 15, 2006 at 10:16 AM

    Does Lucinda Marshall know what doesn’t cause cancer?!  Grilled chicken has carcenogens also...so do we go back to fried chicken and clog our arteries?  How about eating chicken RAW!  Then we can get sick more quickly and Marshall can speak the evils of chicken farming!!!

    The point of buying those beautiful pink packages are numerous:

    1) It’s a variation of a product you already had in mind
    2) it doesn’t cost more to do something good for cancer research
    3) it feels good to give to socially consious products
    4) PINK is a visual reminder that it is time to check your breasts for lumps if you haven’t already been doing it and to remind your friends and family

    I don’t personally care if Lucinda Marshall gets a mammogram or not.  It is an individual choice.  I do appreciate the medical community for doing all that they can to help women prevent and detect breast cancer and also to treat it.  Nobody likes chemotherapy or radiation...but until science comes up with something better, whatareyagoin’do?

    I don’t think this “femisist” really cares about women and health issues as much as she is trying to write a controversial piece and get her name out there.  Congrats, Lucy, you are in print.  Bottomline for you, isn’t it?!

    Posted by kimberlyausten on Dec 15, 2006 at 6:39 PM

    Lucinda has made some really interesting points.  One of the problems is that organizations that need money seem to think that they have to “sell” something to get people to give.  Frankly I’d rather just give them the same amount of money so that all of it goes to work rather than buy something that I’d probably not buy anyway...such as pink M&Ms;.... and what is actually happening is that we’ve allowed corporate interests to promote their products rather than to make sizable donations to a cause that’s important to women.

    And I agree with Lucinda’s information as to the causes of breast cancer, which again relates to corporations whose manufacture of chemicals and other products contribute massively to all kinds of disease in humans…

    Posted by babe on Dec 19, 2006 at 9:37 AM

    First of all, what is this quote by Jaynse Ashley?  Penis trinkets?!  Livestrong uses yellow wrist bands to promote testicular cancer awareness.  No one has breasts trinkets for breast cancer awareness.  Quote is nonsensical.  Secondly, corporations are “giving” back and doing something for the good of the people.  Hazards exist in industry...one cannot get around it.  How many people who complain about the ills of industry only ride their bicycles to work, only use produce brought to retailers on a horse and carriage, only heat and cool their homes with what nature provides?  I would be buying pink m&M;’s because of the BCA program and the fact I buy the candy any way.  I did go out of my way to purchase a pink Dyson as my old vacuum needed replaced.  I did buy a whole bunch of BCA pink KitchenAid appliances and utensils for my daughter as her favorite color is pink, and I bought all of my daughters the pink Better Homes and Gardens cookbooks.  We have a dear friend who had a double mascestomy 10 years ago due to breast cancer.  She has two daughters that are genetically predisposed to breast cancer also.  The genetic predispositions dramatically affects the how the environmental causes will impact the individual. 

    As a journalist, will Lucinda only submit and write for firms using only 100% recycled paper?  Will she hand deliver each article?  Will she rely on the “evil” transportation industry to get newspapers and magazines delivered?  Will she only use the internet thus utilizing the services of the “evil” power industry?  What kind of car does she drive?  What kind of car do YOU drive?

    Hypocrisy runs rampant, once again!

    Posted by kimberlyausten on Dec 19, 2006 at 2:34 PM

    Before stating that anyone is a hypocrit on this issue or stating how corporations are “giving back” you’ll need to do your homework.  It’s corporations that have gotten us into the war in Iraq and most all other wars.  It’s corporations such as the World Bank and the IMF that have destroyed the economy in other countries. 

    It’s corporations that make products that pollute, poison, kill us, etc...all for a profit.  All corporations are not suspect but most of them are.  Do your home work.... sure Bill Gates gives back but he still has a monopoly on computer software and is one of the world’s richest men.  I don’t begrudge him his wealth or even his desire to own all the software that runs all the computers in the world.  I do believe that developing software probably doesn’t pollute, I’m sure there is not source code dumped into any rivers or burned to put into the air.

    Yes, genetic predisposition will dramatically affect how the environmental causes will impact the individual...that doesn’t excuse us for creating these environmental clauses. 

    Buy whatever color you like of anything you like.  My point was that I believe corporations are more interested in the bottom line than in our health and that when I give to the cancer foundation I give to the cancer foundation because ALL the money goes to help find a cure, not just a portion of something I buy.

    Posted by babe on Dec 19, 2006 at 2:58 PM
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