OASIS FORUM Post by the Golden Rule. GoldTent Oasis is not responsible for content or accuracy of posts. DYODD.

Goldilocks Todays Story “Cancer Cases Mystery”

Posted by Mr.Copper @ 14:57 on July 22, 2018  

I’ll put some parts, but don’t know if link will work. I had to log in for that. The REAL study should count the number of “survivors”. Normally the REAL cancer just kills you right away.

If you hear about many or too many people surviving stage 4 cancer, (I have) you can conclude it was “fake cancer” from machines designed to find the tiniest thing and start treating it, instead of just watch it.

Remember all the fake silver jewelry stories? Magnetic silver? The store owners didn’t even know they had fake silver jewelry on display. “Oh no it can’t be fake, the buyer would know that” I was told at a Kay Jewelers store, I went into with a strong magnet.

Another jewelry store I KNOW the guy who owns it. Told him. He took out big Silver Chains, all magnetic. I was sorry I showed him. Hell feel guilty selling it.

PARTS below:

They uncovered 608 cancers that had occurred at elevated rates in Centereach, Farmingville and Selden, an area with 65,000 residents.

Of that total, 311 were lung cancers, which was 56 percent higher than the state rate for that disease. The three-community area also had 112 cases of bladder cancer, which was 50 percent higher than the state rate; 98 cases of thyroid cancer, 43 percent higher; and 87 cases of leukemia, which occurred at a rate that was 64 percent higher.

A strong argument against an environmental association emerges from the deep well of data on how cancers develop in the first place. Malignancies evolve over years — anywhere from five to 40 — before overt symptoms are noticed. That kind of time frame not only is long, but suggests some individuals whose cases were tallied in the investigation probably had cancers that developed years earlier while residing elsewhere.

Hannun predicted lung cancer diagnoses are likely to increase in the three communities and elsewhere in Suffolk, not because smoking is on the rise but because Stony Brook Hospital is broadening a screening program. Low-dose CT scans can reveal tiny lung cancers that otherwise would have eluded detection.

“This is just to say if you start looking for something, you’ll probably find it,” Hannun said.

“I have friends with breast cancer, friends with lymphoma,” Lanzetta said. “My eyes are open more to cancer. It seems like more people out here are being diagnosed, and there are no answers why these people are more affected.”

Hutton added, noting that one in two men and one in three women will be diagnosed with cancer at some point in their lives.

https://www.newsday.com/news/health/cancer-data-long-island-1.20014336

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Post by the Golden Rule. Oasis not responsible for content/accuracy of posts. DYODD.