Because hormone mimicking chemicals are endocrine disruptors (which may cause cancer), should Medical schools have Nature and Natural systems foundations. Should they be Nature schools?

In the mid-1990s, when writing a paper for a toxics and hazardous substances class, I had a theory combining what I knew about nature and what I read in medical school journals.  It was that manufactured toxic and hazardous substances like organochlorine (including dioxin) are endocrine disruptors because of hormone mimicry.  This theory had to do with the cause of breast cancer but may cause cancer itself.  Do drugs cause mimicry?  It may be the mimicry of calcium that causes cancer.  Does this cause bone cancer as well?  Is it the same process for mimicry of insulin?  Could this be the cause of pancreatic cancer that metastasizes to other organs?  Do tampons contain any manufactured chemicals that may cause hormone mimicry?  Does my paper on organochlorines have an association with paper mills?  Are we all exposed to hormone-mimicking chemicals in the environment, food, paper products, and water?  Do hormones in meat contribute to hormone mimicry in people?  When exposed to hormone-mimicking chemicals, does the body respond by increasing water retention and lipids?  Does breast size increase when exposed to these hormone-mimicking chemicals?  Does this mean that everything we do must adapt toward desired future conditions?