France offers to pay for breast-implant removal.
Աշխարհ
BBC - The French authorities have recommended that 30,000 women have faulty breast implants removed as a precaution. The government, which says there is no evidence of a cancer link, will cover the cost.
The implants by French firm Poly Implant Prothese (PIP) were banned last year after they were found to contain a non-medical grade silicone filler.
But the UK government ruled out routine removal, saying there was "no evidence" of a safety concern.
It is thought some 40,000 British women have the implants.
Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said: "At the moment we are in a position where we have no evidence of a link to cancer.
"We have no evidence of toxicity, we have no evidence of substantial difference in terms of ruptures of these implants compared to others.
"So we don't have a safety concern that would be the basis for the routine removal of these implants."
Chief Medical Officer Dame Sally Davies said women with PIP implants "should not be unduly worried".
"We have no evidence of a link to cancer or an increased risk of rupture. If women are concerned they should speak to their surgeon," she said.
"While we respect the French government's decision, no other country is taking similar steps because we currently have no evidence to support it."
The UK medicines watchdog, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Authority (MHRA), said it recognised women's concerns.
But it added in a statement: "We currently have no evidence of any increase in incidence of cancer associated with these implants and no evidence of any disproportionate rupture rates other than in France."
It said France had reported rupture rates of around 5% for PIP implants, compared with 1% in the UK.
The French health ministry said women with PIP implants did not have a higher risk of cancer than women with implants made by other companies, but said there were "well-established risks of ruptures".
Health Minister Xavier Bertrand urged French women to have the implants removed as a "preventive measure," but said that it was not "urgent."
The corrective surgery will be paid for out of public health funds but the French state will only pay for a new implant if the treatment was done as part of reconstructive surgery following breast cancer.
If women do not want to have their implants removed, the state will pay for six-monthly ultrasound scans.


















































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