Here’s a sobering thought inspired by the prospect of President Obama and Congress nationalizing the U.S. health care system: Breast cancer rates in Europe under nationalized health care systems are significantly higher than they are here, and women are much more likely to have breast cancer there than here.
Gateway Pundit’s Jim Hoft looked at the data and the clips on this issue and found some extremely disturbing facts:
“Currently the United States leads the world in treating breast cancer. Women with breast cancer have a 14 percent higher survival rate in the United States than in Europe. Breast cancer mortality is 52 percent higher in Germany than in the United States, and 88 percent higher in the United Kingdom. Breast cancer mortality is also 9 percent higher in Canada than in the US. Less than 25 percent of U.S. women die from breast cancer. In Britain, it’s 46 percent; France, 35 percent; Germany, 31 percent; Canada, 28 percent; Australia, 28 percent, and New Zealand, 46 percent.
“The European Network of Cancer Registries reported: “Breast cancer is also the most common cancer in females in Europe. It is estimated that in the year 2000 there were 350,000 new breast cancer cases in Europe, while the number of deaths from breast cancer was estimated at 130,000. Breast cancer is responsible for 26.5 percent of all new cancer cases among women in Europe, and 17.5 percent of cancer deaths.”

