CANCER-GATE: HOW TO WIN THE LOSING CANCER WAR*

by NOHA Professional Advisory Board Member Samuel S. Epstein, MD.

NOHA is proud to inform you of the following new awards to Dr. Epstein: The Albert Schweitzer World Academy of Medicine is pleased to announce that Dr. Samuel S. Epstein, Professor emeritus of Environmental and Occupational Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health, and Chairman, Cancer Prevention Coalition, has been awarded the Albert Schweitzer Golden Grand Medal for Humanitarianism, the degree of Doctor Honoris Causa in Humanities, and Honorary membership in the Polish Academy of Medicine, for his longstanding and pioneering international contributions to cancer prevention.
These awards were presented on June 10, 2005, at a formal ceremony at the Royal Castle in Warsaw.



Sameul S. Epstein, MD, June 10, 2005

Contrary to three decades of promises, we are losing the winnable war against cancer. The hand-in-glove generals of the federal National Cancer Institute (NCI) and the private "nonprofit" American Cancer Society (ACS) have betrayed us. These institutions have spent tens of billions of taxpayer and charity dollars primarily targeting silver-bullet cures, strategies that have largely failed, while virtually ignoring strategies for preventing cancer in the first place. As a result, cancer rates have escalated to epidemic proportions, now striking nearly one in every two men, and more than one in every three women. This translates into approximately 50 percent more cancer in men, and 20 percent more cancer in women over the course of just one generation.


The hand-in-glove generals of the federal National Cancer Institute (NCI) and the private "nonprofit" American Cancer Society (ACS) have betrayed us. These institutions have spent tens of billions of taxpayer and charity dollars primarily targeting silver-bullet cures, strategies that have largely failed, while virtually ignoring strategies for preventing cancer in the first place.


These failed strategies are largely due to institutional malaise and outdated mindsets fixated on treatment, to the virtual exclusion of prevention, other than quitting smoking. There is much more. The NCI and ACS are corroded with major institutional and personal conflicts of interest with cancer drug companies ("Big Pharma"). As candidly admitted by a recent NCI director, the NCI has become a "government pharmaceutical company." For the ACS, these conflicts extend to environmental polluters in the chemical industry and connivance in white collar crime. Not surprisingly, The Chronicle of Philanthropy has charged that "the ACS is more interested in accumulating wealth than saving lives." These close ties to industry have transformed the NCI and ACS into cheerleaders for special interests rather than stewards of the public interest.

Astoundingly, the NCI and ACS are sitting on mountains of information about avoidable environmental causes of cancer. Rather than making this information available to the public in any systematic and understandable way, this silence has even extended to frank suppression of such information, denial of the public's right to know, and violation of human rights.


. . . the NCI and ACS are sitting on mountains of information about avoidable environmental causes of cancer. Rather than making this information available to the public in any systematic and understandable way, this silence has even extended to frank suppression of such information, denial of the public's right to know, and violation of human rights.


We can "take back" the war against cancer with a wide range of strategies. These include "right-to-know" laws, ensuring public dissemination of critical information on environmental carcinogens and avoidable causes of cancer, and legislative reforms and oversight to ensure that the NCI protects the public rather than special interests. This searing exposé of the NCI and ACS and the proposed reforms of public policy have been endorsed by over a hundred leading independent experts in cancer prevention and public health, as well as by activist citizen groups.

The Losing War

How to Win the War
A wide range of reforms could save hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of lives. These include:


*Samuel S. Epstein, MD, CANCER-GATE: How to Win the Losing Cancer War, soft cover, 377 pages, Baywood Publishing Company, Inc., Amityville, New York, 2005 (800-638-7819), $24.95.

Article from NOHA NEWS, Vol. XXX, No. 4, Fall 2005, pages 1-2