Five
Easy Things You Can Do Now to Help Prevent Breast Cancer
by Susun
Weed
October
is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. But many women are calling it Breast
Health Awareness Month! Rather than focusing on breast cancer, we choose
to concentrate on keeping our breasts healthy through wise lifestyle
and dietary choices.
The following
tips may amaze you, since the actions and foods they suggest run counter
to many alternative views of cancer prevention. They are supported with
strong research, however - from the lab, with animals, and in long-term
human studies. Thus, each of these tips has a solid scientific basis,
unlike the assertions made by those intent on selling you their opinions
and products.
Embarking
on even one of these suggestions will definitely lower your risk of
breast cancer. Using them all is even better. And as a special treat,
I have added three extras. Look for lots more tips for keeping your
breasts healthy in my book Breast Cancer? Breast Health! The Wise Woman
Way, recommended by many oncologists and breast health specialists including
Dr. Susan Love. And please visit my special breast health website: www.breasthealthbook.com
1.
Be more active
Evidence
continues to accumulate that a vigorous lifestyle is one of the best
ways to cut breast cancer risk. A study of 20,624 Norwegian women found
those who exercised or worked out regularly cut their breast cancer
risk by 72%. (NEJM, 5/1/1997)
For breast
health I walk every day, take a weekly yoga class, and do tai chi twice
a week.
2.
Eat more unrefined seed foods
All seeds
provide phytoestrogens. Women who eat the most phytoestrogenic foods
are four times less likely to be diagnosed with breast cancer than those
who eat the least. "No study has shown a degree of risk reduction
similar to that found for phytoestrogens ..." (Lancet, 10/4/1997)
Whole grains
such as wheat, rice, corn, kasha, millet, and quinoa are unrefined seed
foods. Beans such as lentils, black beans, pinto beans, lima beans,
and chickpeas are unrefined seed foods. Nuts including peanuts, walnuts,
almonds, and pecans are unrefined seed foods. And edible seeds such
as sesame, sunflower, and pumpkin are unrefined seed foods. Fruits and
vegetables that are eaten with their seeds - such as strawberries, blueberries,
raspberries, kiwi fruit, summer squash, tomatoes, and cucumbers - count
as unrefined seed foods. Even seeds used as seasonings count, such as
cumin, coriander, caraway, anise, and dill seeds.
For breast
health, I have replaced all refined carbohydrates - including white
rice and white/unbleached flour products such as pasta, bread, cookies,
crackers, pretzels, bagels, donuts, and cakes - with whole grain products.
3.
Eat less vegetable oil; increase animal fat, especially from dairy products
"Diets
high in corn oil leave animals especially vulnerable to chemically induced
cancers" say researchers. (Science News, 6/24/89; 10/2/99) Frightening
as this statement is, it is not true only of corn oil but of all vegetable
(or seed) oils including those made from soy, sesame, sunflower, cottonseed,
flax, and hemp.
If you
are dubious about eating more animal fat and dairy products to reduce
breast cancer risk, consider this landmark study reported in the Archives
of Internal Medicine (1/12/1998). To determine if food affected breast
cancer risk. The diets of 61,000 Swedish women between the ages of 40-76
were followed for four years. The results? For every 5 grams (about
a teaspoonful) of vegetable oil consumed per day, breast cancer risk
increased by 70%. In contrast, for each 10 grams of fat from meat and
dairy products in the daily diet, breast cancer risk was decreased by
55%.
Another
study, begun in the early 1970s, followed 4,000 Finnish women's diets
for 25 years. Results recently released found that those who "drank
the most milk had only half the breast cancer risk of those who drank
the least."
American
researchers agree. According to a report in International Journal of
Cancer (2001), women who drank milk as children and continued drinking
it as adults had half the rate of breast cancer of non-milk drinkers.
(Yes, I do buy organic milk, but the studies used regular supermarket
milk.)
Why? Galactose,
the primary sugar in milk, slows ovarian production of estradiol, a
cancer-promoting hormone. Additionally, milk is rich in CLA (conjugated
linoleic acid), a fat known to suppress breast tumors in animals.
For breast
health I use yogurt, cheese, milk, butter, and olive oil daily, and
eat meat occasionally.
Remember
that olive oil is pressed from a fruit, not a seed. Women whose diets
are high in olive oil, and who eat meat and dairy products regularly,
have the lowest rates of breast cancer in the world. (Journal of the
National Cancer Institute, 1/18/1995)
4.
Eat less tofu and soy beverage; eat more miso and tamari
While it
is true that if you begin eating soy foods as a child and continue throughout
puberty the breast tissues you create during your adolescence will be
highly resistant to cancer until after menopause. However, if you begin
eating unfermented soy (tofu, soy milk, and the like) after puberty,
your risk of breast cancer increases. (Science News, 4/24/1999)
The active
ingredient in soy - isoflavone - when given to breast cancer cells in
petri dishes causes them to grow rapidly. (Extracts of dong quai and
licorice have a similar effect.)
Miso and
tamari - fermented soy foods - are the exceptions. Both are strongly
cancer preventative, no matter when you start eating them. Animal studies
have found both miso and tamari highly effective in preventing cancer,
even in mice genetically programmed to get breast cancer. And the more
you eat, the more you lower your risk of cancer.
For breast
health, I use miso and/or tamari every day. I occasionally eat tofu
or edemame. I drink no soy milk, and eat no other soy products of any
kind.
5.
Eat foods rich in antioxidants; avoid supplements of vitamins C and
E
A diet
that contains plenty of foods rich in antioxidants definitely lowers
breast cancer risk. But supplements seem to do the opposite.
Doctors
in Stockholm observed that, among breast cancer patients, treatment
failures were higher for women taking vitamin E supplements - and the
failure rate increased with dose. Studying this effect, researchers
found that the anti-cancer benefits of fish oils "disappeared when
[we] gave ... antioxidant vitamins". In fact, when mice with breast
cancer were given vitamin E supplements "the more we gave them,
the bigger their tumors grew." The authors conclude that vitamin
E supplements "preferentially protect a cancer and even aid its
spread." (Science News, 4/29/1995 and 7/15/1995)
Supplements
of vitamin C (synthetic ascorbic acid) are poorly used by body tissues.
But cancer cells seem to thrive on it. (Cancer Research, 9/15/1999)
One new "chemotherapy" links a lethal form of zinc to an ascorbic
acid molecule; when the cancer eats the ascorbic acid, the zinc is set
free to kill the cancer cell.
For breast
health I eat 5-7 servings of dark green and bright red/orange foods
daily.
Besides
being active, choosing a diet high in phytoestrogens, eating one or
more servings of dairy products daily, using miso and tamari regularly,
and avoiding vitamin supplements, here are three more things you can
do to help prevent breast cancer:
6.
Sleep in the dark
Exposure
to light at night increases the risk of breast cancer. The Journal of
the National Cancer Institute (8/17/2001) reports that chronic suppression
of melatonin - an anti-cancer hormone made only in the dark - increases
breast cancer risk by at least 36%.
For breast
health, be certain there is no light (except from the moon) in the room
where you sleep. Not even a night-light. Not the light from a clock.
Not the little lights on electronics.
7.
Drink red clover blossom infusion
Red clover
is a potent anti-cancer herb. It contains ten times more phytoestrogens
than soy, and in a more complete form. I have seen it clear in situ
cancers and pre-cancerous polyps hundreds of times. Since many breast
cancers take 7-10 years to become big enough to be seen on a mammogram,
I drink a quart of red clover infusion every week and skip the mammogram.
To prepare
the infusion:
²
Place one ounce, by weight (about a cup by volume), of dried red clover
in a quart canning jar.
²
Fill the jar to the top with boiling water and lid tightly.
²
Let steep for four hours or overnight.
²
Strain and drink.
²
Refrigerate excess and drink within 24-36 hours.
For breast
health, I drink red clover infusion regularly.
8. Eat
seaweed as a vegetable
If the
long-lived and cancer-free Japanese have a secret, it is seaweed, not
soy. A sprinkling of kelp as a seasoning is nice, and so are nori rolls
- but neither does much to prevent cancer. For that we must eat seaweed
as a vegetable - at least a half-cup serving per week. Wakame, kombu,
kelp, and alaria are especially effective, but sea palm fronds, hijiki,
nori, and dulse may be used on occasion.
There is
a rich variety of seaweeds available in Chinese grocery stores, health
food stores, and by mail. Seaweed recipes are available in many books
(including my herbal Healing Wise).
These eight
tips - five easy ones and three more difficult ones - will vastly increase
your chances of living to be a wild, wise old woman with healthy breasts.
That's the Wise Woman Way the world round.
Susun Weed
PO Box 64 Woodstock, NY 12498 Fax: 1-845-246-8081
Visit Susun
Weed at: www.susunweed.com
and www.ash-tree-publishing.com