All posts by wildcardenvironmentalist

Helen Lynn has worked on issues linking women, gender, health and the environment since 1995, initially at the Women’s Environmental Network where she was health co-ordinator for 12 years, then as a freelance consultant. She has worked internationally and at EU level with Women in Europe for a Common Future and is on their International Advisory Board. Her campaign work began with Putting Breast Cancer on the Map, which encouraged women to map local sources of pollution alongside incidence of breast cancer and she was one of the founders of the No More Breast Cancer Campaign. She is on the Soil Associations Health Products Standards Committee which develops and keeps under review standards for organic health and beauty care products. While at WEN she and the health team initiated the Getting Lippy campaign on harmful ingredients in cosmetics, the campaign covered all aspects of the issue including information on toxic ingredients, making your own cosmetics, misleading labelling and advertising of the products and which alternatives are available. Other campaigns Helen worked on included the Ban Lindane (a toxic pesticide used on crops) Campaign, Healthy Flooring, Enviromenstrual, and Multiple Chemical Sensitivity. She currently facilitates the Alliance for Cancer Prevention which works with occupational and environmental health specialists and activists to challenge the existing emphasis on control and treatment of cancer as the only way forward and to get equal recognition for primary prevention, particularly in relation to environmental and occupational risk factors. In 2014 along with fellow breast cancer activists she began the From Pink to Prevention campaign which aims to move the agenda towards Stopping Breast Cancer before it Starts.

OCTOBER – BREAST CANCER PREVENTION/AWARENESS MONTH

In the forthcoming Breast Cancer Awareness Month we ask if you can remove the Pink Ribbon ‘Blindfold’ and ask this BIG QUESTION of the Breast Cancer Charities:

WHY do they persist in refusing to acknowledge the role of environmental and occupational toxicants by  ignoring decades of evidence up to the present day on the link between our lifelong (womb to grave) exposures to toxics and the escalating incidence of breast cancer?

Why do Breast Cancer Charities continue to focus solely on ‘lifestyle’ risk factors such as diet and exercise, while ignoring the potential 60% of breast cancer cases for which they have no explanation. What about the role of chemical, environmental and occupational exposures in this?

Better diagnostics and treatment is not mutually exclusive with looking at how our profoundly polluted environment, homes and workplaces impact on our bodies and health, while also taking into consideration the ‘precautionary principle’ – ie better safe than sorry.

The World Health Organisation states that prevention (which is not the same as early detection) offers the most cost-effective long-term strategy for the control of cancer. So why do we not see this reflected in our cancer plans and strategies? Why is primary prevention (stopping the disease before it starts) not equally addressed along with better treatment and care? Why are those with the power to influence decisions on breast cancer policy not acting on what we already know?

Join us this October in removing the pink ribbon blindfold and asking the Breast Cancer Charities the Big Question:

WHY they persist in refusing to acknowledge the role of environmental and occupational toxicants by ignoring decades of evidence up to the present day on the link between our lifelong (womb to grave) exposures to toxics and the escalating incidence of breast cancer.
Continue reading OCTOBER – BREAST CANCER PREVENTION/AWARENESS MONTH

Press Release: Open letter to Breakthrough (Breast Cancer Now)

Press Release: 16/6/15

Open letter to Breakthrough Breast Cancer (Breast Cancer Now)

An open letter sent to Breakthrough Breast Cancer (now called Breast Cancer Now) calls on them to review their public literature and acknowledge the environmental and occupational links to breast cancer.

The letter signed by concerned organisations and scientists and addressed to Baroness Morgan expresses the hope and expectation that the merger between Breakthrough and Breast Cancer Campaign affords a timely opportunity for the new organisation, under her leadership, to make progressive changes to breast cancer prevention policies.

The signatories include Breast Cancer Consortium, Brighton Breast Cancer Action, Challenge Breast Cancer Scotland,  From Pink to Prevention, the Hazards Campaign, the Health and Environment Alliance EU, Dr. Jim Brophy and Dr. Margaret Keith and the Women’s Environmental Network Scotland.

Specifically in relation to incidence, risk and prevention of breast cancer, we hope that future prevention policies will include the previously downgraded or overlooked roles of environmental and occupational risk factors in breast cancer.

The open letter calls upon Breakthrough (Breast Cancer Now) as a leading voice on the management, treatment and prevention of breast cancer in the UK, to use its public and political influence to shape a new vision for breast cancer policy; one that, from a more advanced and informed 21st century position regarding prevention, leads the cancer charity sector by:

  • acknowledging environmental and occupational links to breast cancer
  • acting upon environmental and occupational risk factors for breast cancer
  • embracing the precautionary principle as fundamental to all future work on the disease
  • making reference to the attached scientific reports and statements in the literature review for future public documents on breast cancer risk
  • providing fully referenced sources in all your future public information documents.

The signatories were gravely concerned to discover that in its public literature Breakthrough neither uses the term nor acknowledges the existence of Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals (EDCs) and, even more importantly, their role in breast cancer.

We are not alone in our view that EDCs are one of the biggest public health threats of this century. The World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) say EDCs are a global threat to health and the environment that needs to be resolved as soon as possible. An overview of the multiple scientific reports on the issue was sent along with the letter.

We believe that action on EDCs goes hand in hand in hand with the precautionary principle which in the response to our initial letter we were told: “We do not believe the balance of evidence currently supports the adoption of a precautionary principle at this time in the UK. (Letter from former CEO of Breakthrough Chris Askew February 2015)”

The UK is legally committed to the precautionary principle through its signature on a number of UN treaties including the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Rio Declaration and subsequent Agenda 21. In choosing not to support the European-wide move for the adoption of ‘Precautionary Principle’ policies to protect humans, wildlife and the environment from the harmful effects of man-made toxics (CMRs and EDCs), we believe that Breakthrough is by-passing an opportunity, not only to broaden the scope of its prevention agenda, but also to make an immeasurably valuable contribution to preventive health in the UK. (April letter 2015)

From Pink to Prevention (FPTP) has been in correspondence with Breakthrough Breast Cancer since 2014 because of statements made and conclusions drawn in their booklet Breast cancer risk – the facts. The booklet was due for reprint last year so FPTP took the opportunity to write and ask about some of the assumptions.

Primarily the ‘fact’ that in the booklet risk of breast cancer from exposures via our environment or workplace fall into the same risk category as bumping your breast or wearing an underwire bra. FPTP were also quite shocked to discover that lifelong exposure to harmful chemicals in our environment and workplaces was dismissed as scientifically unproven or lacking in sufficient evidence to warrant it being considered a risk factor or unlikely to affect risk of breast cancer.

FPTP sent initial letter in December 2014 asking for the literature review that formed the basis for Breakthrough’s booklet. We received a reply from the then CEO Chris Askew in February along with the literature review for the booklet.

In the meantime Breakthrough and Breast Cancer Campaign amalgamated to form Breast Cancer Now and Baroness Delyth Morgan has returned to become CEO of the newly formed charity so we redirected our reply to Chris Askew’s letter to Baroness Morgan.

The subsequent open letter reflects international concern in relation to the lack of attention paid to environmental and occupational risk factors for breast cancer and primary prevention. We hope to see some progressive work from this newly formed charity and await a positive response to our letter.

Contact details: Helen Lynn (07960033687) Deborah Burton (07779 203455)

PDF of Press Release

Notes to editor:

  1. In campaigning to move the breast cancer agenda from Pink to Prevention the FPTP campaign team is pre-occupied with one BIG fundamental question. The correspondence with Breakthrough was initiated by FPTP because of the public information booklet, ‘Breast cancer risk – the facts’. This has become the first target for the BIG question that underpins the objectives of our campaign – to expose the barriers to preventive  measures for the major cancer affecting women worldwide.
  2. An endocrine disruptor is an exogenous chemical or mixture that interferes with any aspect of hormone action.

 

Aunty’s rules

ON PRODUCT LABELS  

Aunty says: When I go shopping I always follow a few basic rules.

IF:

  • there is NO LIST of ingredients on a product
  • the ingredients list is Impossible to SEE because of the colour used e.g. white on yellow,
  • the words are so small it’s impossible to READ the ingredients list without a large magnifying glass
  • I need a degree in chemistry in order to UNDERSTAND the ingredients list

I choose NOT to buy that product (or any other products from that brand range) because I believe I have the right to know what’s in EVERY product I wish to purchase without the need of a magnifying glass or a chemistry degree.
Continue reading Aunty’s rules

INTRODUCING AUNTY – your personal guide to shopping for safe products

AUNTY SAYS

Until governments formulate legislation enforcing retailers and manufacturers to provide full information regarding the ingredients in the products they make and sell, let’s get on with the job ourselves of:

  • becoming ‘informed’ consumers
  • rejecting certain products known to contain toxics
  • rejecting certain brand names known to use toxics in their products
  • letting retailers, manufacturers and corporate brands know what we don’t want, through our combined purchasing power.

Continue reading INTRODUCING AUNTY – your personal guide to shopping for safe products

Dr Nigel Gray 1928 – 2014

In honouring the life’s work of Dr Nigel Gray, Distinguished Fellow in Cancer Prevention, we are proclaiming our regard for him as a relentless defender of public health. His life-goals and achievements serve as a model for all researchers, medical practitioners and scientists who, in possession of empowering qualifications and experience, can choose to make a stand against both industry and government for failing to address the negative impact on the health of people and the environment resulting from the uncontrolled manufacture and release of man-made toxics.

In December 2014, Australia lost Dr Nigel Gray AO (Order of Australia), a remarkable man whose lifelong and groundbreaking work laid the foundation for the implementation of the tobacco control measures across the globe today.

Through his dedicated life’s work; informing and protecting pubic health from risks associated with tobacco products; gaining legislated control of the tobacco industry Dr Gray was internationally recognized for his:

  • pioneering work as one of the first in the world to recognize tobacco as a major cause of cancer and other chronic diseases,
  • unstinting campaign against the powerful tobacco industry in order to obtain tobacco control measures, and
  • gaining of worldwide attention on tobacco as a serious risk to health.

Continue reading Dr Nigel Gray 1928 – 2014

Save the date for our campaign meeting

Save the Date for our first campaign meeting on Tuesday 27th January 6.30pm.

VENUE Leigh Day Priory House, 25 St John’s Lane, London EC1M 4LB Nearest tube station: Farringdon
If you can RSVP to info@frompinktoprevention.org before the meeting, that would help us gauge numbers.
Note: some people attending the meeting are allergic to fragrance so the meeting will be a fragrance free one.
Appreciate your support in this. Hope to see you on 27th January!

We remain deeply concerned by the total marginalization of environmental and occupational links to breast cancer – we believe the ‘pink’ takeover of the disease has played a big part in this, as fundraising has become the predominant ‘pink-driven’ focus for the public. Fundraising is good – but not when it displaces other, equally vital elements of the debate. We argue that lifelong, low-level exposure to the cocktail of hundreds of MERCS (Mutagens, Endocrine Disruptors, Reproductive Toxicants and Carcinogens) in our everyday lives – from pesticide residues in food to chemicals in consumer products and in the workplace – is linked to ever-rising rates of the disease.

As part of this, we want governments and legislators to mark a new approach by acting on the BEST option that is to Ban, Eliminate, Substitute and Tag (label) all known and suspected MERCs for all our environments, living, working, – land, sea and air and our first environment, the womb. This to happen in line with existing legislation such as EU’s REACH and the COSHH hierarchy and by utilising initiatives like the SIN List.

Last year, as part of the lead up to launching this new campaign, we held screenings of Pink Ribbons Inc and also held our ‘toxic tour’ in central London –and we look forward to seeing some of you who joined us on those events as well as new faces, at our first London campaign meeting on Tuesday 27th January at 6.30pm. We look forward to sharing more information about the campaign, plans for actions, support for this work across Europe and the World; and hearing your feedback on the campaign as we get underway.  Best wishes, Deb, Di, Helen and Jennie