JENSEN: BREAST CANCER SCREENING VITAL
Dr JENSEN (Tangney) (9:48 AM) —I rise to speak on behalf of the
millions of Australians whose lives have been touched by breast cancer
and the millions more who at some stage will either suffer from the
disease or know someone who does. BreastScreen Australia has done a
remarkable job since it was established in 1991. It screened more than
1.6 million women in 2005-06, undoubtedly saving many lives when
problems were detected early. In 2006 2,618 women died of breast cancer
in this country, and tens of thousands more every year suffer the
physical and psychological trauma of aggressive therapy for the
disease.
We should never forget that for every woman who is
diagnosed with breast cancer and for every woman who feels distress at
the possibility that she has developed the disease there are partners
and children, fathers and mothers and brothers and sisters who are
sharing their pain. With this in mind, I am astonished by suggestions
this week that BreastScreen Australia services be restricted to women
in higher risk age groups. Of those being tested today, 26 per cent are
women outside the target group of 50 to 69 who feel concerned enough to
seek screening for this terrible disease. Some are saying we should
turn them away—or turn away at least those under 45 or over 75—that
their concerns are not worthy of state funded screening and that a
simple check for the disease is an extravagance, despite the fact that
many women outside the key age group develop breast cancer each year
and many die from it.
Proponents of this plan say it will
save resources which can then be diverted to ensuring more women in the
higher risk group are tested. Members on this side of the House are
amongst the staunchest critics of wasteful expenditure, but we
recognise that some things are beyond putting a price on. I for one do
not want to live in a society which does not care. Public education may
reduce the demand for screening by many women in other age groups, but
even if it does not we must continue to extend the service to all women
who are concerned enough to take that step of seeking a test. If they
do have breast cancer, it needs to be picked up early and treated. The
epitaph that they could have been saved but for a few dollars more is
not one that I want to put my name to.