According to a report credited to Yahoo Science and Health, Angelina
Jolie Pitt’s breast surgery increased women’s awareness of
reconstructive breast surgery options, according to a new study from
Austria. Many researchers and media stories have speculated this, but
the new research is the first prospective, scientific study to look at
the impact of Jolie Pitt’s announcement, the researchers said.
Jolie
Pitt made headlines in May 2013 was she announced that she had
undergone a double mastectomy because she had tested positive for a
mutation in the BRCA1 gene. Such a mutation significantly increases risk of breast cancer, and Jolie Pitt wanted to prevent herself from getting the disease. Her announcement generated considerable media attention.
Angelina Jolie Pitt |
In the new study, researchers found that after Jolie Pitt’s announcement, 92.6 percent of women in the study said they knew that breast reconstruction was an option after a mastectomy, up from 88.9 percent who said the same in a poll that was done shortly before her announcement.
“This
is the first prospective report to prove the media’s effect on the
healthcare-related issue of breast cancer among the general public,” Dr.
David Lumenta, an assistant professor of plastic surgery at the Medical
University of Graz in Austria and lead researcher on the new study,
said in a statement.
The study “was based on a serendipitous design,” Lumenta said. The researchers had just conducted a poll on women’s knowledge of breast reconstruction a month before Jolie Pitt’s announcement.
The
scientists decided to do a second poll, a month later, they wrote in
their study published today (Sept. 28) in the journal Cancer. Both polls
were conducted online, and each included 1,000 Austrian women.
There
was an even greater increase in awareness that breast reconstruction
could be done using a woman’s own fat tissue, as opposed to synthetic breast implants,
the researchers found. The “post-Angelina” poll found that 68.9 percent
of participants were aware of this possibility, up from 57.6 percent in
the “pre-Angelina” poll, according to the study.
The
largest increase the researchers observed was in women’s awareness that
breast reconstruction surgery can be done during same operation as the
breast-removal surgery. In the second poll, 59.5 percent of participants
said they were aware that both surgeries could be done together, up
from 40.5 percent in the first poll, according to the study.
In
addition, the researchers also added several questions to the second
survey to get more information about the impact media coverage had on
participants. One-fifth of the participants said that the media coverage
of Jolie Pitt made them “deal more intensively with the topic of breast
cancer.”
Previous
retrospective studies have looked at the so-called Angelina Effect. A
2014 study in the United Kingdom found that after Jolie Pitt made her
announcement, the demand for genetic testing for breast cancer nearly
doubled, and the number of inquiries about risk-reducing mastectomies
also increased. In that study, researchers looked at data that had
already been collected in the years prior to Jolie Pitt’s announcement
and compared it to data collected after her announcement.
Another
2014 study found that although 75 percent of Americans were aware of
Jolie Pitt’s announcement and surgery, less than 10 percent of the
respondents fully understood how the BRCA gene affected her risk for the
disease. (Very few women have a risk level as high as Jolie Pitt’s.)
Lumenta said that it is important for doctors to consider the effects of media coverage on their patients. “Since individual choice will become a driving force for patient-centered decision-making in the future, cancer specialists should be aware of public opinion when consulting patients with breast cancer,” he said.
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