Research conducted by Patrick Carroll of PAPRI at London show that in countries with higher abortion rates like the UK can be a substantial increase in breast cancer. Where such a low incidence of abortion in the Republic of Ireland north of the possibility of its increase is very small. When the number of abortions declined as d Danish and Finland, the occurrence of breast cancer can in anticipation. Carroll uses the same mathematical model to estimate Jumah breast cancer in some previous studies used to predict the number of breast cancers in England & Wales based on cancer data up to year 1997 has proven accurate for predicting cancer in 1998-2004. In four countries - England & Wales, Scotland, Finnish and Danish discovered a striking fact in which upper-class women and women who are highly mobile over a lot of breast cancer compared with lower-class women. This has in meticulous in Finland and the Danish and the influence on the awareness of these risk factors have been at trial, but the gradient is not described further.
Carroll mentions that the option to have an abortion in this class may explain this phenomenon. The women who pursue higher education and careers as professionals often delay marriage and having children. Abortions performed before the birth of first child is extremely carcinogenic. Carroll uses data from countries believed to have a level of accuracy of the calculation data on abortion. Therefore, research is not easily biased. "It is time for scientists to admit publicly what they knew and documented to be a secret between them - that abortions increase the risk factor for breast cancer - and to stop acting the fool just to protect the existence of various practices tails that can be medically dangerous demands of law "so according to Karen Malec, president of the Coalition of Abortion / Breast Cancer. Coalition of Abortion / Breast Cancer is an organization of international women in shape to protect health and safety of the lives of women by educating and providing information on abortion, as one risk factor for breast cancer.