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If you are 18 years old or older, and you're reading this, you have the right to make your own medical decisions. But that could change in an instant.

For example, an accident or illness could leave you -- temporarily or permanently -- unable to make those decisions.

That is why it is so important that every adult have a carefully drafted Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care. The International Task Force's (ITF) Protective Medical Decisions Document (PMDD) is one such legal document that allows a person to name someone to make those decisions in the event they cannot make them for themselves.

Parents of college students take it for granted that, if they are paying for their child's medical care, they always have the right to make medical decisions for a son or daughter who becomes unable to do so. But that is not the case.

In fact, they may even be unable to get information about a hospitalized adult child's medical condition.

However, the person who is designated in a PMDD to make health care decisions can have access to such information. Young adults can designate a parent as their decision maker so that, in the event of a sports injury, illness or accident, someone who knows and loves them will have the authority to protect their lives and well-being. That's why a PMDD should be one of the necessities given to each and every 18-year-old.

To obtain a PMDD package from the ITF for yourself, for a college student, or for anyone else, call 800.958.5678 and ask about the PMDD package.

 
UNC Study: Protection Against Future Breast Cancer (OGS, 1/2003) PDF Print E-mail

FIRST PREGNANCY DELIVERED vs FIRST PREGNANCY ABORTED

A GAIL MODEL RISK ANALYSIS

 

The protective effect of an early first full term pregnancy against future development of breast cancer has been undisputed for 35 years.

The landmark study establishing this protective effect [MacMahon, et al, (1970) Bulll WHO 43:209-221] is widely accepted in the medical world.

MacMahon, and group reanalyzed their 1970 data [Trichopolous D,  Hsieh C, MacMahon B, Lin T, et al,, Age at any Birth and Breast Cancer Risk, International J Cancer, 1983:31:70l-704], finding that each one year delay in the first full term pregnancy increased relative breast cancer risk by 3.5% (compounded). 

Obviously, aborting a first pregnancy eliminates the protective effect against breast cancer.

In an attempt to calculate the risk in numbers that both patient and physician can more readily relate to, Thorp applied the Gail model risk analysis to typical real-life situations (Thorp et al., Long Term Physical and Psychological Health Consequences of Induced Abortion: Review of the Evidence; Obstetrical and Gynecological Survey, Vol 58, #1, Jan 2003, pp 75,76). 

The following discussion, including tables 8, 9, and 10, are excerpted directly from this reference. 

"We think, given the undisputed protective effect of a full-term delivery early in one's reproductive life on subsequent breast cancer development, that a young woman facing an unwanted or crisis pregnancy can and should be informed that the loss of that protection would derive from her decision to terminate her pregnancy and delay
having a baby  (98, 101). 

  


To illustrate, Table 8 uses the Gail Equation to predict 5-year and lifetime risk of breast carcinoma for an 18 year-old woman with an unintended or crisis pregnancy. 

The Gail model (99) is considered the best available measure for estimating an individual woman's risk of developing breast cancer.
 
In the first scenario, she decides to terminate and then has her first term delivery at age 32;  in the second scenario, she has a live-born infant.  We then assess her individual risk at age 50, when the risk of breast cancer begins to peak.  For both black and white women, her decision at age 18, and her subsequent reproductive choices, can almost double her 5-year and lifetime risk of breast neoplasia at age 50. 

Tables 8, 9, and 10 demonstrate that the "loss of protection" effect is most pronounced in women under 20 years of age who elect to undergo abortion rather than continue their pregnancy

Clinicians [should be] "obliged to inform every pregnant woman that a decision to abort her first pregnancy may almost double her lifetime risk of breast cancer through loss of the protective effect of a completed first full-term pregnancy earlier in life."

(References are not reproduced here, but are available in the Thorp et al. original article)
[Joe DeCook, MD for AAPLOG]

 
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