Category Archives: cancer screening

Are Mammograms Causing More Breast Cancer? - Discussion

We have several articles on mammograms on this website, and here is another one by Mike Adams. There are some points in this article which may be controversial, for example, that the cancer industry is deliberately using mammograms to cause more cancers, in order to boost its own business and profits.
You may or may not [...]

Mammograms and Increased Breast Cancer Risk - Follow-up Discussion on Recent Research

In a previous article (http://www.cancerresearchinformation.com/breast-cancer-risk-raised-by-mammograms-research-shows/), the link between mammograms and elevated risk of getting breast cancer was discussed.
That article had highlighted a study presented at the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA)’s annual meeting. The following article provides a short follow-up on this issue.

Breast Cancer Risk Raised By Mammograms, Research Shows

Elsewhere on this website, we have published information that suggests a link between mammograms and increased risk of breast cancer. And evidence in this regard continues to mount.
What’s more, the research showing the negative effects of mammograms on breast cancer risk is actually carried out by conventional medical or scientific researchers. Surely the truth is [...]

Mammograms May Contribute to Breast Cancer Risk

Many parties, from doctors to the media and concerned family members, parrot the notion that mammograms help to detect breast cancer in women and thus help to “save lives”. Such assertions, however, fail badly at bringing attention to the other side of the coin - such diagnostic tests actually contribute to the development of cancer, [...]

Examining the Dangers of Cancer Screening

Cancer screening - mammograms, pap smears, PSA tests and what not - are often, if not always, touted by mainstream medicine as a means to “prevent” cancer. Early detection means a much better chance of successful treatment and thus survival, they say.
However, in reality, there is very little evidence, statistically, that cancer screening actually does [...]