05-06 TABLE of CONTENTS:
Rose Kushner and breast cancer
DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and
EVENTS
QUOTE by
Susan L. Adkins and Andrea Martin.
Rose Kushner and breast cancer
Rose Kushner died at age 60 in January 1990 of
breast cancer. But because of her, thousands of women won't.
Ruth Kushner gained national recognition in 1975 when
she wrote about her battle with breast cancer in a book Why Me? What
Every Woman Should Know About Breast Cancer to Save Her Life - a book
that virtually ripped the hinges off the horrible way surgeons were treating
women suffering from breast cancer.
Treating might be the wrong word. Their "treatment"
consisted of lopping off the breast and sewing up the incision with dark,
ugly stitching in a seemingly haphazard way that left an ugly scar.
And their attitude, with few exceptions, was and "don't
you dare ask questions of us. Just pay at the desk on your way out."
Although she was loudly condemned at the time, many
of the suggestions Ruth Kushner made have been adopted by the medical community...
including the less radical lumpectomy.
She was awarded the Society of Surgical Oncology's
James Ewing Award for outstanding contributions by a lay person to the
fight against cancer.
Her husband said it was poetic justice "because
the society's members had booed her off their stage in 1974 when she challenged
their standard treatments."
She was still battling insurance companies to get
them to finance mammograms at the time of her death. This is a battle that
wasn't won for 20 years and only with the intervention of the federal government.
When Ruth Kushner was diagnosed with a lump in her
breast in the mid-1970s, the standard treatment was an immediate operation...often
within hours. A woman was never given a choice of treatment or ever questioned
about the extent of the amputation.
Not wanting that, it took Kushner 18 phone calls before
she could find a general surgeon to remove the lump and to find a breast
cancer specialist to remove her breast when the lump proved cancerous.
She survived more than 15 years - which is considered
medically to be a full recovery.
Because of Ruth Kushner's stand-up fight for the right
of a woman patient to become involved in her treatment and be allowed to
make her own informed decisions, thousands upon thousands of women are
living full, productive lives today. And women's futures
are brighter because Ruth Kushner's solitary fight forced medical research
on breast cancer ahead.
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05-06 DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and EVENTS
B. 05-06-1829, Phoebe Ann Coffin, (aka Phebe Hanaford), first woman
ordained in New England as a minister. PAC was an successful author
in addition to being a Universalist minister.
B. 05-06-1831, Mary E. Clemmer Aimes wrote an influential column
in the Washington, D.C. weekly the Independent. She was a women's
rights advocate who believe in economic gain rather than suffrage. Her
motto: "Women can live nobly without voting,
but they cannot live without bread."
B. 05-06-1939, Margaret Drabble, British novelist who explores
the fractured landscape of women's lives in modern England. She is also
a biographer, playwright, author of children's books, and editor of The
5th Edition of the Oxford Companion to English Literature that for
the first time included a representative number of women's works. The change,
of course, offended many men who objected to the "lowering of standards!"
Her novel The Millstone (1965) was the basis
for the movie A Touch of Love (1969). Her novels have become increasingly
"feminist" as she ages. She her works as social history, mainly
about young women embarking on life and relationships.
B. 05-06-1950, Jamie Gorelick, deputy attorney general of the United
States, was second in command to Janet Reno.
Event: 05-06-1952: the Methodist General Conference at its annual
conference refuses to accept women as ministerial members.
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QUOTES DU JOUR
ADKINS, SUSAN L.:
"Women do not cry from
physical pain. Instead we weep from pure anger. This woman cries for a
country that in 1991 poured $2.2 BILLION into each B-2 bomber while it
invested only $92.7 million in breast cancer research."
-- Susan L. Adkins, "After
Mastectomy," Ms. Magazine.
MARTIN, ANDREA:
"Until recently, breast
cancer was one of America's best kept secrets. But now, it's time for us
to STOP being quiet. You and I must end the outrageous acceptance of breast
cancer as simply a risk of being a women."
--Andrea Martin, Executive Director,
The Breast Cancer Fund.
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