The Unholy Alliance Part One
By Kathleen Deoul
( Page: 9 of 15)
A study published in the Journal of Occupational Medicine in 1977 reported that women exposed to vinyl chloride in the workplace experienced a higher than expected rate of deaths from breast cancer.
But you don't have to work around toxic chemicals to develop an increased breast cancer risk.
On Long Island, the New York Department of Health found that women who had lived near large chemical plants located there experienced a sharply increased risk of breast cancer. Another study, published in the International Journal of Epidemiology found that breast cancer mortality among white women increased in direct proportion to how close they lived to one of that state's 111 Superfund toxic waste sites. The closer they were, the greater the risk.
Further, it's not just epidemiological studies that suggest the link between chemical pollution and breast cancer.

The Unholy Alliance [Part One]
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Contact
Kathleen Deoul, Media Matters
Email:
admin@cancer-coverup.com

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