Ladies, Ditch the Bra

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Ladies Ditch Bra

Ladies Ditch Bra

Originally published on Fearless Parent

EVIDENCE OF A RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN BRAS AND BREAST CANCER MAY RETHINK THE SOCIETAL CONVENTION OF WEARING BRAS

I realize it may feel some combination of uncomfortable, unprofessional, or unnecessarily provocative. Societal convention has most of us trussing up before going out.

If you are reading this at home, do me a favor and unhook. Then keep reading.

THERE IS SOME EVIDENCE OF A RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN BRAS AND BREAST CANCER

Yes, seriously.

DRESSED TO KILL: The Link Between Breast Cancer and Bras

Sydney Ross Singer and Soma Grismaijer authored a book called Dressed To Kill. They interviewed 4,000+ women in five major U.S. cities over two years. Half the women had been diagnosed with breast cancer. They found:

  • 75% of women who slept in their bras developed breast cancer
  • 1 in 7 who wore their bras 12+ hours per day developed breast cancer
  • 1 in 168 who did not wear a bra developed breast cancer
  • Within one month of ditching their bras, women with cysts, breast pain, or tenderness found their symptoms disappeared.

Ladies Ditch Bra

BREAST SIZE, HANDEDNESS, AND BREAST CANCER RISK

A 1991 article in the European Journal of Cancer found that premenopausal women who do not wear bras had half the risk of breast cancer compared with bra users. The data also suggest that bra cup size (and breast size) may be a risk factor for breast cancer.

Ladies Ditch Bra

CANCER IS NOT A DISEASE

Andreas Moritz revealed that Japanese, Fijians revealed that Japanese, Fijians, and women from other cultures were found to have a significantly higher likelihood of developing breast cancer when they began wearing bras. His book explains how cancer is an adaptive healing mechanism, arguing that people would die more quickly if the body did not form cancer cells.

Ladies Ditch Bra

BRAS AND GIRDLES CAN REDUCE MELATONIN LEVELS

Japanese researchers found they can lower melatonin by 60%. Melatonin has anti-cancer properties. And Spanish researchers wrote about the use of melanonin in breast cancer prevention and treatment.

Ladies Ditch Bra

THERE’S NO DOWNSIDE TO BEING CAUTIOUS

Am I suggesting this scanty fact base offers definitive proof of a causal relationship? No.

Am I suggesting you should be comforted that the National Cancer Institute, the American Cancer Society, and the New York Times all believe it to be bunk? No.

That’s a longer discussion, but it’s sufficient to say that politics and economics create active bedfellows and the absence of a commercial imperative might have something to do with the dearth of research.

Many of us don’t need to wait in order to do something that intuitively seems to make a lot of sense. Frankly, in view of the alarming rate of breast cancer prevalence in this country (12.3% of women) and the growing trend to remove body parts in an attempt to improve our odds, it seems we might be receptive to a bit of behavior modification.

Ladies Ditch Bra

THINGS TO CONSIDER DOING:

GO BRALESS AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE

It actually gets easier. When these muscles and ligaments are forced to bear the weight of our breasts, muscle tone returns. The more you wear a bra, the more you need to wear a bra. Chest muscles and breast ligaments atrophy, which then makes it feel uncomfortable to go braless.

A 15 year French study conducted by Besancon CHU professor Jean-Denis Rouillon found that “medically, phyisiologically, and anatomically, breasts gained no benefit from their weight being supported in a bra.” There was some evidence that eliminating bra use helped ease back pain. He described bra wearing as a “false need.”

Remove your bra when you get home. Don’t wear a bra to bed. And if you’re self-conscious when going out, try wearing camisoles, thicker material, or nipple pads. It does make sense to wear a support bra while exercising.

Ladies Ditch Bra

WEAR LOOSE BRAS IN SOFTER MATERIALS AND AVOID UNDERWIRES

Tight bras and underwires restrict lymphatic drainage, promoting congestion and stagnation of toxic waste materials that are supposed to be flowing out for excretion. Further, the closing of lymphatic vessels reduces the delivery of oxygen and nutrients to the cells.

Michael Schachter, MD, FACAM wrote that bras and tight clothing can impede lymph flow and contribute to the development of breast cancer.

John MacDougall, MD wrote in The Lancet that repeated inflammation from constricting bras are implicated in painful breast cysts and lumps, scar tissue develops, and milk ducts become plugged, all of which is associated with a higher risk of breast cancer.

The metal in underwire bras can create an “Antenna Effect” according to the father of Applied Kinesiology, George Goodheart, DC. Repeated pressing of metal over an acupuncture point can cause longer-term stimulation of neuro-lymphatic reflex points corresponding to the liver, gallbladder, and stomach. “It will likely make her sick; slowly and quietly,” said John Andre, ND, DC.

Here’s a list of no-underwire bras recommended by Donna Eden, Vicki Mathews, and Titanya Dahlin. Donna adds that plastic underwires have the same negative impact as metal underwires.

Ladies Ditch Bra

SLIDE THE WIRES OUT!

There’s no need to toss your expensive underwire bras. If you cut a small opening at one end of the wire, you can manually remove it from each cup. You’ll probably find that your bra supports you nearly as well without them. Oh, and don’t be fooled. They make look like plastic, but they’re actually plastic-coated metal. If you find you still need the support, you can buy and insert plastic wires. Andre explains how.

Ladies Ditch Bra

For additional research on the harms of bras read our articleBreast Cancer Cover-Up Continues or get the bookDressed To Kill: The Link between Breast Cancer and Bras.”


Originally published: 14 July 2014 13:06:54 -0500

Article updated: 10 August 2019

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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of GreenMedInfo or its staff.

Ladies Ditch Bra

BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH – Remember to check those boobies!

BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH

BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH APRIL 2017

October 17, 2016 6.08am AEDT

BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH
It’s normal for breasts to be a little bit lumpy

BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH

Looking closer at the bright pink display, I discovered a sales campaign in full swing, seemingly timed to coincide with “breast cancer awareness month”.

BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH
QV Breast Cream screen shot.

Two dollars from each tube sold was going to a breast cancer charity, and there was a ready-to-use social media hashtag – #IPledgeToCheck. In large font was the message “self checking your breasts is important”.

This is a fairly familiar message. But is it true? The evidence is surprisingly complicated.

BREAST CANCER SCREENING

Breast cancer is a common and important disease. Affecting about one in eight women at some point in their lives, it is the second most common cause of cancer death in Australian women. I’ve seen it profoundly affect many people, including several of my general practice patients. Preventing this would be wonderful.

Cancer screening means looking for cancer in people without symptoms. An established (though still controversial) example is mammography: breast X-rays. Another less established method is breast self-examination.

At first glance, being offered a chance of finding cancer early sounds like a good thing. But it’s more complicated than that. Some screening tests, despite good intentions, fail to help, or even cause harm.

There are various ways screening can mislead us. Screen-detected cancers often show better survival rates than other cancers, but this doesn’t mean the screening is saving lives.

It can instead mean we’re just detecting the cancer earlier without changing its course, or that the screening is picking up some so-called “cancers” that would never have caused symptoms (this is called “over diagnosis”).

Screening can also cause problems by raising false alarm – discovering a lump that resembles possible cancer, but after a worrisome round of tests turns out not to be.

To best measure the effect of a screening program, we need large “randomized controlled trials” of screening. These are studies in which people are randomly allocated to either screening or normal care, and followed over time to see what happens.

BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH

THE PARADOX OF BREAST SELF-EXAMINATION

Two large trials of breast self-examination measured important outcomes such as harms and death. In these trials, study staff taught groups of women how to examine their own breasts in a careful, structured manner. Monthly self-examination was encouraged.

These women were followed up and compared to other women who had no training or encouragement in self-examination.

The results of these studies have been brought together and meta-analysed (mathematically combined) in order to summarize our best evidence on the effectiveness of self-examination.

The combined results from nearly 400,000 women are disappointing: encouraging women to examine their own breasts does not prevent any deaths from breast cancer, but does cause false alarm and an increase in the need for biopsies (involving needles or surgical excision).

But here’s the apparent paradox: despite this lack of effectiveness of breast self-examination in these trials, most breast cancers are still discovered because women notice a change in their breasts.

Trying to put these seemingly contradictory facts together can be headache-inducing. How can this all be true?

It must be that significant breast cancers are likely to be detected spontaneously or accidentally by women in the course of normal life, even without self-examination. Adding structured, monthly self-examination sounds wise, even noble, but sadly our best evidence finds it is unhelpful and leads to false alarm.

Why the false alarm? Because it’s normal for breasts to be a little bit lumpy, as firmer glandular breast tissue sits suspended amongst looser fatty tissue. Picking the “signal” of cancer from the “noise” of normal lumpiness can be tricky.

BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH

SO WHAT SHOULD WE DO?

Authors of breast cancer guidelines have tried to resolve the apparent paradox. They recognize the ineffectiveness of formal regular self-examination, but they also don’t want women to completely ignore their own breasts.

As a sort of compromise, guidelines now talk about  breast awareness – having some self-awareness of one’s breasts, and knowing the importance of presenting quickly to a doctor if a change is noted.

This is a prudent message, and it is one I share with my patients. But it’s still unclear exactly where the sweet spot lies between too much self-examination and too little awareness.

These evidence-based uncertainties and nuances are often lost in media messages about breast awareness, and they seem thoroughly lost in this moisturizing cream’s marketing campaign. On Twitter and YouTube, the manufacturer actually encourages women to perform daily self-checks, “by making it part of their every day skincare routine”.

To be fair to the manufacturer, the “daily routine” phrase is echoed by Cancer Australia. But Cancer Australia seem more relaxed about the process, stating that no special technique is necessary and suggesting that a more casual awareness in the shower or in the mirror may suffice.

I haven’t found any evidence to show that using a moisturizing cream is necessary or helpful in cancer detection. So it’s not at all clear that this cream will save anyone from bad cancer outcomes, and there’s a real possibility of causing false alarm. While sales help raise money for a worthwhile charity, it’d be more efficient to donate directly.

Is it possible, behind all the pink-tinted pledge-gathering, that the main goal of this campaign is simply to sell moisturizing cream?

BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH

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