vozwa.. vavammw=m1=ak,:..,0•:%=-,:az.-amanu, ,,,x,v4=amvammw.,:szay..„.:mxmag..a.Aw-,44,2=wwwzgazza g.30.w2,..swm,:wp.:0.=.4w20.kuoimmv,:zwommuvozoar4t====== I TO( /CH t - 7 Observing Judaism's laws of family purity • can help detect the early onset of some diseases. LYNNE MEREDITH COHN STAFF WRITER A4V!, *Of.4,4 lthough less than 1 per- cent of women who are di- agnosed with cervical cancer regularly go to the mikvah (ritual bath), the act of immersion itself does not protect against this disease. But women who observe the laws of family purity, taharat hamishpachah, see some medical benefits to the practice, along with the spiritual. Cervical cancer is sexually transmitted, says Dr. Mark Schare, an Orthodox obstetrician/gynecol- ogist in Birmingham. "You can't catch cancer, but you can catch the virus that causes it; it's been linked to human papilomavirus (HPV), a virus that's sexually transmit- ted." That means that without sexu- al promiscuity, which is highly dis- couraged in observant Jewish circles, there is less of a chance, if any, to come down with this type of cancer, Dr. Schare says. Dr. Alfred Tanz, an Orthodox man who is attending obstetri- cian/gynecologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in Manhattan and clini- cal professor of ob/gyn at New York Medical College, Doctors say concurs. During 35 regular mikvah (ritual bath) use years of gynecolog- ical practice, among does not a largely Orthodox necessarily clientele, Dr. Tanz protect women from cancer. has "never seen a case of cervical can- cer in an Orthodox woman who ob- serves taharas mishpachah." But he quotes a colleague who "agrees to some degree but believes the rate of cervical cancer will rise in this group as they fall prey to the blandishments of modem society: multiple sexual partners, etc." Of course, "the fact that you're having intercourse with 100 men doesn't mean you're going to get cervical cancer," Dr. Tanz assures. "But statistically, the chance of get- ting cervical cancer increased [be- cause of more unprotected sex]." In Israel, the rates of cervical cancer are rapidly rising among Jewish women, according to an ar- ticle in the newspaper Ma'ariv. But the rate among religious Israeli women who observe the family pu- rity laws is "quite low," according to Dr. A. Shechter of Beilinson Hos- pital in Petah Tikvah. But just because a woman goes to the mikvah and separates phys- ically from her husband for part of the month doesn't mean she is any healthier than a woman who does not observe these laws. Dr. Schare says, "I don't think that just because they go to the mikvah they are any more inclined to go to a physician." Regarding cervical cancer, the screening for the HPV virus is done through regular pap smears, he says, which must be done by a physician. The laWs of family purity require husband and wife to separate phys- ically from the onset of the woman's menstrual period until seven days after it ends. Until the woman makes a trip to the mikvah, or rit- ual bath, the couple cannot resume relations. Some say this practice of physi- cal abstinence enhances a couple's emotional relationship. Others maintain the practice brings a woman even closer to God. Most women who observe these laws say they teach women to know their own bodies. And while a regular immersion may not actually do anything for a woman's physical health, the prac- tice of the laws of family purity might. Chana Finman, a Lubavitch reb- betzin in Oak Park, knows women who have found health problems early due to familiarity with their h a, - own bodies. One friend "told me that the doc- tor said, 'Hit weren't for the laws c° of mikvah, it would have been de- tected much later.' We do an in- ternal examination, and that can lead to some very beneficial results ALERT page 71 SO