Text Only
Search Special English

Fewer US Women Getting Mammograms

15 May 2007
MP3 - Download Audio audio clip
Listen to MP3 audio clip
Listen in RealAudio audio clip

Correction attached

This is the VOA Special English Health Report.

Research is often a slow, maddening search for answers where each new finding only seems to raise more questions. 

This is the case with a story we told you about last month. It offers a good example of how difficult it can be to define a relationship between two events, or even prove a connection.

In this case, one event was a sudden drop in the use of hormone replacement therapy. The other, which followed, was a sharp drop in the breast cancer rate in the United States. 

Many older women stopped taking hormones after a government warning in two thousand two about possible risks.

Last December a team of scientists reported that breast cancer rates fell in two thousand three. Then, last month, they reported that the breast cancer rate was still down in two thousand four. They suggested that the major cause was most likely the drop in hormone use.

For evidence the researchers presented two main findings. One was that the reduction in the breast cancer rate was greatest among cancers fed by estrogen. Estrogen is commonly used in hormone replacement therapy. The other finding was that the reduction happened mainly among older women -- the main users of the therapy.

The scientists suggested that going off hormone therapy reduced the risk of cancer growth. They said other explanations for the drop in the breast cancer rate were possible, but less likely to have played a big part.

Now, a new study looks at one of those other possible influences: a decrease in mammogram testing for breast cancers. The study by the American Cancer Society just appeared in the journal Breast Cancer.

First, the study shows that breast cancer rates began to fall in nineteen ninety-nine. That was three years before the government warning about hormone therapy.

Secondly, the study shows that after the warning, fewer women had mammograms, which are usually done with X-rays. A mammogram is required before starting hormone therapy.

Whatever the reason for the decrease, fewer tests would mean fewer chances to find cancers. Still, many experts believe that the drop in estrogen-fed cancers in older women had something to do with the drop in hormone use.

A final note: government researchers reported Monday that mammogram testing fell four percent between two thousand and two thousand five. The lead researcher called it "very troubling."

And that's the VOA Special English Health Report, written by Caty Weaver. I'm Barbara Klein.

---

Correction: Based on information supplied by the American Cancer Society, this story says a study found US mammography rates fell 4 percent from 2000 to 2005. The drop, among women age 40 and older, was almost four percentage points, from 70.1 percent to 66.4 percent.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Breast Cancer in US Stayed Down in '04 for Second Year
 
  Featured Story
Batman Stars, but the Joker Steals the Show in 'The Dark Knight'  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
'Naked' Short Selling Gets a Close Eye  Audio Clip Available
Schools Look to Save Money With Four-Day Week  Audio Clip Available
American History Series: The Last Days, and Lasting Influence, of Thomas Jefferson  Audio Clip Available
Going for the Gold at the Olympics in Beijing  Audio Clip Available
Dr. Michael DeBakey's Long and Productive Life  Audio Clip Available
Probable Sale of America’s Largest Sugar Cane Grower Pleases Activists for Everglades  Audio Clip Available
Aspirin: How Research Keeps Giving New Life to an Ancient Medicine  Audio Clip Available
What Is Your Favorite Song About Summer?  Audio Clip Available
A Gift of Clear Vision in Developing Countries  Audio Clip Available
Sydney Pollack, 1934-2008: He Directed, Produced and Acted in Many Popular Hollywood Movies  Audio Clip Available
Ace in the Hole: Put on Your Poker Face  Audio Clip Available