Breast Cancer Rates Have Nearly Doubled Since 2021 and Doctors Are ‘Baffled’

A writer for the Daily Mail has just published a column about her close circle of friends in the UK. They’re all young women, in their 30s and 40s, and four of them have been diagnosed with breast cancer in the past few months. Their oncologists are all “baffled.” What could possibly be causing so many young women to develop breast cancer? It’s another medical mystery, ladies and gentlemen!

Jana Hocking writes that her close friends have received the terrible news in the past year. The oldest was Nikki, 45, who has been through radiation treatments and a double mastectomy. Her friend Emma, 43, has been diagnosed with stage 4 breast cancer and her prognosis is “grim.”

Hocking’s friend Collette is in her 30s. An anonymous 34-year-old friend is also on the list. They’re all mothers and they all developed breast cancer, which is extremely unusual in a group of young women like this.

“They are not worried about missing out on grandchildren one day,” writes Hocking. “They are worried about not seeing their kids finish high school.”

With so many of her young friends developing breast cancer, Hocking scheduled a full-body checkup for herself. She says that her doctor quietly told her that their clinic in the UK had been seeing a notable increase in the number of young people developing cancer. But again, it’s all a big medical mystery.

If you do a CTRL-F search in Hocking’s article, you will find zero results for any words that start with the letters “vacci—”.

The median age at which women are normally diagnosed with breast cancer is 62 or 63. Women do get diagnosed with breast cancer in their 30s and 40s, although the numbers are historically much lower.

Hocking correctly notes that in Australia, they used to diagnose about 500 women per year in the 20-to-39 age bracket. They’ve been diagnosing more than 900 per year recently, and the numbers are still trending upward.

Breast cancer diagnoses among young women in Australia have nearly doubled in recent years. Thyroid, bowel, and kidney cancers among young people have also been increasing dramatically.

That’s in Australia. But what about here in the United States and in the UK? Are we seeing similar trends?

For some unexplained reason, health authorities in the UK stopped publishing age-specific breast cancer cases in 2021. They only report the total number of women developing breast cancer but no longer break it down among age groups. You can’t determine if breast cancer rates are trending upward among young women. Although based on Jana Hocking’s story, it looks like they are.

Okay, what about here in the United States? If you try to research breast cancer rates among women under 40, you will learn that in 2022, the CDC under the Biden regime stopped publishing the data. They completely stopped publishing the number of women under 40 developing breast cancer in the US.

That’s odd. That is literally one of the main jobs of the CDC.

You can find all sorts of random things in the CDC’s databases, detailing how Americans in various age brackets are dying or getting sick. The CDC tracks how many Americans are trampled to death by cows every year, for example (around 20). About 200 Americans are killed annually by hitting a deer with their car. Nearly 400 Americans die each year by falling out of bed. About 60 Americans are killed by bee stings every summer.

Bee stings, cow tramplings, deer collisions, falling out of bed, backyard swimming pool drownings, lightning strikes, and shark attacks are all important enough for the CDC to keep track of.

But not breast cancer cases among women under 40. At least not since 2022, for some unexplained reason!

It almost makes you wonder if something happened back in 2021 that health officials did not want the general public to know about. Doesn’t it seem suspicious that public health agencies in the UK and the United States stopped tracking breast cancer rates in women under 40 at the same time?

Of course, we’re being sarcastic. We all know what this is about. We know why doctors are “baffled” by breast cancer rates nearly doubling among young women since 2021. They’re pretending it’s a medical mystery because they are guilty.


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