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| What Exactly Is Cervical Cancer? |
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What Exactly Is Cervical Cancer? Is It Caused By Sexual Contact Or Intercourse? Most will say that cervical cancer is caused by the HPV virus, but this is a medical myth. HPV has never been proven to cause cervical cancer. Mind you that HPV (human pappilomavirus) usually clears up on it’s own, so if you want to test on HPV, it’s quite useless and so is getting the gardasil vaccine, which in itself may have very dangerous side effects(includingdeath)“Cervical Cancer Virtually 100% Avoidable Cervical cancer is well documented to be caused by an infection acquired through sexual contact. So it is behaviorally avoidable. Many conservatives oppose making this vaccine mandatory, citing fears that it could send a subtle message condoning sexual activity before marriage.
Also, a New England Journal of Medicine study found the use of condoms reduces the incidence of HPV by 70 percent. By comparison, Gardasil counteracts four varieties of HPV that cause 70 percent of the cases of cervical cancer and 90 percent of genital warts. According to the CDC, HPV is the most common sexually transmitted disease in America (more than 6 million women contract it annually), yet the immune systems of many women are strong enough to clear up these infections on their own. In addition to the population studies that link HPV to cervical cancer, there is, for example, research living with any type of cancer showing that HPV viral DNA can be found integrated in the genetic structure of cervical cancers. Back in 1992, however, a question was raised about the dominant and increasingly entrenched theory that HPV causes cervical cancer. It came from Peter Duesberg and Jody Schwartz, molecular biologists at the University of California at Berkeley. Among the various issues they raised about the acceptance of HPV as the cause of cervical cancer was their fundamental concern that there was a lack of consistent HPV DNA sequences and consistent HPV gene expression in tumors that were HPV-positive. They instead suggested that “rare spontaneous or chemically induced chromosome abnormalities which are consistently observed in both HPV and HSV DNA-negative and positive cervical cancers induce cervical cancer.” |
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