Miss America to Have Both Breasts Removed

NOTE:  First, let me say that I do NOT believe in double mastectomies for preventive purposes.  Even with a history of breast cancer, removal of both breasts, just in case, is in my experience a surgical risk and is not warranted.  Of the 250,000 new breast cancer cases per year, 5,000 are in men, 25,000 are in women under 50, the rest are in women OVER 50.  To have your breasts removed in your 20s when there is no sign of cancer is NOT advised.  I wanted to get all of that out, having worked in healthcare finance for over 25 years, so that you know I am not condoning, simply passing on this new phenomenon of women so scared of dying that they remove their body parts.

Miss America contestant to get a double mastectomy as preventive measure

Published January 11, 2013

Associated Press

  • MissAmericaMasectomy.JPG

    Jan. 8, 2013: Miss DC, Allyn Rose, during the Evening Wear portion of preliminary competition at the 2013 Miss America Pageant in Las Vegas. (AP)

LAS VEGAS –  Win or lose Saturday, Miss America contestant Allyn Rose will have conveyed a message about breast cancer prevention using her primary tool as a beauty queen: her body.

The 24-year-old Miss DC plans to undergo a double mastectomy after she struts in a bikini and flaunts her roller skating talent. She is removing both breasts as a preventative measure to reduce her chances of developing the disease that killed her mother, grandmother and great aunt.

“My mom would have given up every part of her body to be here for me, to watch me in the pageant,” she said between dress rehearsals and preliminary competitions at Planet Hollywood on the Las Vegas Strip Wednesday. “If there’s something that I can do to be proactive, it might hurt my body, it might hurt my physical beauty, but I’m going to be alive.”

If crowned, the University of Maryland, College Park politics major could become the first Miss America not endowed with the Barbie silhouette associated with beauty queens.

Rose said it was her father who first broached the subject, during her freshman year of college, two years after the death of her mother

“I said, `Dad I’m not going to do that. I like the body I have.’ He got serious and said, `Well then you’re going to end up dead like your mom.’ ”

She has pondered that conversation for the past three years, during which she has worked as a model and won several pageants, including Miss Maryland USA, Miss Sinergy and the Miss District of Columbia competition, which put her in the running for Saturday’s bonanza.

With her angular face, pale blonde hair and watchful blue eyes, Rose is unusually reserved. She acknowledged that she comes off as more of an ice-queen than a girl next door

“You have to block out everything and I think sometimes that makes me appear a little cold,” she said. “But it’s because I had to be my own mentor, I had to be my own best friend.”

She measures her age by the time of her mother, Judy Rose’s, first diagnosis, at age 27.

“Right now, I’m three years away,” she said.

Judy had one breast removed in her 20s, but waited until she was 47 to remove the other one, which Rose’s father had called a ticking time bomb.

“That’s when they found she had a stage three tumor in her breast,” Rose said. “And that’s why for me, I’m not going to wait.”

She plans to have reconstructive surgery, but said the procedure has complications and there is no guarantee that she will regain her pageant-approved bust.

Preventive surgery is a “very reasonable” choice for someone with Rose’s family history and a genetic predisposition, said Patricia Greenberg, Director of Cancer Prevention at the Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center in Los Angeles.

“I’ve seen young women have it done, and they have great peace of mind,” she said, adding that the alternative is repeated mammograms and physical exams, which detect but do not prevent cancer from developing.

The number of women opting for preventive mastectomies increased 10-fold between 1998 and 2007, as genetic testing and reconstructive surgery options improved, according to a 2010 study published last year in Annals of Surgical Oncology.

Art McMaster, CEO of the Miss America Organization, called Rose an “incredible example” of strength and courage.

The Newburg, Md. native said she has received letters from supporters all over the country, including from fellow “previvors” who say they have been inspired to undergo their own preventive surgeries. The Wynn sports book gives her 25 to 1 odds of winning the Miss America crown, making her a moderate favorite.

But her decision is drawing criticism as well as praise in the staged-managed world of pageants, where contestants regularly go under the knife for a very different reason.

She also receives hate mail from beauty circuit die-hards who write to insist that she continue filling out her bikini.

“You have people who say, `Don’t have the surgery. This is mutilating your body. You don’t have cancer.’ They want to pick apart every little thing,” she said. Some have even accused her of faking the make herself a more media-friendly candidate.

This kind of pre-emptive surgery has divided the medical community as well. For someone in her early 20s to have the procedure is “very unusual,” said Todd Tuttle, chief of surgical oncology at the University of Minnesota.

Sandra Swain, medical director of Washington Cancer Institute in Washington, DC, fears that women who have lost family members to breast cancer could take Rose’s example too literally.

“We’re seen a rise in prophylactic mastectomies and a lot of it is not for a medical reason; it is because of fear and anxiety,” she said.

Rose does not carry the “breast cancer genes” BRCA1 and BRCA2, but she did inherit a rare genetic mutation which might predispose her to the disease.

Her brother, who works for an oncology association, said he sees the irony in a beauty queen choosing to give up her breasts but supports his sister’s choice.

“For me what trumps everything is her living, hopefully to a ripe old age, as opposed to any ancillary things that she might lose from potentially winning Miss America,” said Dane Rose, 31.

Rose initially said that if she won the crown, she would postpone her surgery until after her year as a title-holder. But while shopping for earrings to match her black velvet pageant gown Wednesday, she said she was now considering having the surgery during her reign as a way of inscribing her platform of breast cancer prevention on her body.

“I’ve been thinking how powerful that might be to have a Miss America say, `I might be Miss America but I’m still going to have surgery. I’m going to take control of my own life, my own health care,’ ” she said. “So I guess it’s up to what happens on Saturday night.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2013/01/11/miss-america-contestant-to-get-double-mastectomy-as-preventive-measure/?intcmp=features#ixzz2HhDXfP9F

5 Comments

Filed under Humor and Observations, Uncategorized

5 responses to “Miss America to Have Both Breasts Removed

  1. Hmm. I don’t know. I mean people make surgical changes to their bodies all the time just for cosmetic reasons. I feel like, maybe her life will be more about quality and less of worry about whether or not she will get breast cancer. The latter is certainly not healthy for anyone. I’m not saying it’s what I would do, but I certainly think that each person has the right to their own body. If someone can add breasts to their body to make themselves feel more attractive, what’s different about someone taking their breasts away for peace of mind? Just a thought. Then again, I’m a very open-minded person and I’m sure there are many valid reasons why one would choose to disagree with me. Kat

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  2. Michael, I appreciate your belief and your experience in the healthcare arena. However, as an 11 year breast cancer survivor, I believe that it is a woman’s decision to do what she believes needs to be done for peace of mind. It is not easy to live without breasts for whatever reason. Myself, I endured a bliateral mastectomy even though I had only one cancerous breast at the time. My decision was based upon listening to myself and knowing what would bring me peace of mind. I, too, wrote about this article today in my blog.
    Surely, we agree that the eradication of all cancers would be the best ending to this story and to the story of countless others! 🙂

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    • Michael Bradley's avatar Michael Bradley

      I am not opposed to removing parts of you they are diseased. Half of people will die of heart disease, one fourth of cancer, many others of diabetes. All other causes of death are minimum. The top cause of cancers in men 17 to 25 is testicular cancer. However, no doctor would recommend all young man be castrated for prevention. Nor do we replace healthy hearts or kidneys with transplants. My wife’s family has a lot of breast cancer, and her mom died last year from it. My wife is 45 and I would never suggest she amputate any part of her body, just in case. She worries about breast cancer and so do I, but regular screenings will catch it in time. Fear of disease has been trumped up so much that I hate to see young, healthy people, amputating any part of their body out of fear for something they might get or might not. I certainly appreciate opposing thoughts though, and I respect her right to choose to do it. I just think it is a shame a young woman is removing parts of her natural body out of fear.

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      • I think we all agree with you on that. It is for sure a shame that someone is going to remove their breasts out of fear of the unknown. 😦

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      • Michael, I agree with you hat it is a shame that there are women who feel the need to contemplate and to remove them from the fear of getting breast cancer. I also appreciate your respecting her right to do so. Perhaps if we could find a cure, then we would all be so much happier, not to mention healthier! Remind your wife to listen to her body because tests aren’t always correct…I found that out the hard way. May you both have long, happy, healthy lives!

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