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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

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To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (217241)1/11/2002 2:48:35 PM
From: Gordon A. Langston  Read Replies (1) of 769669
 
There are many factors that affect
mammogram accuracy and ultimately survival. Many of those factors can't be controlled. Age is of particular importance because of
the type of breast tissue that exists in younger women. It is harder for radiologists to detect the cancer in pre-menopausal women
because of the density of adipose ( fat ) calls.


Pat, my wife learned you have to be aggressive with these health providers. She got an appointment in Nov. 2000 for a mammogram that through various screw-ups ended up happening in July of 2001. It showed a spot that warranted a closer look and it proved negative but the amount of time that went by was about 9 months, enough time for a cancer to get real.

The lesson, ....do not take it for granted that providers have your best interests at heart, it's at bottom line a business.

P.S. Mammograms are a problem. They sometimes show something that isn't there and miss what is there. Just how cost effective they are versus the next best testing method I'm not sure. What do you think?
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