Lack of information on important health outcomes.Diana Petitti
For women 40 to 49 years, screening mammography can reduce the risk of dying from breast cancer, but the number of deaths averted is much smaller than it is in older women, and the number of false-positive tests and unnecessary biopsies is higher. In the update, the UPSTF reaffirms its ...
Purpose: There is not a consensus concerning recommendations about breast cancer screening which has generated confusion about when and how often to underg... RB Johnson,M Thomeer - 《Cancer Research》 被引量: 0发表: 2022年 USPSTF Recommendations and Overdiagnosis Overdiagnosis is the concept that...
Rates of PSA screening, prostate biopsy and overall prostate cancer incidence declined in the first few years after the recommendation, with a shift towards higher grade and stage of prostate tumours at the time of detection Despite the recommendation, some physicians report ongoing willingness to scr...
Breast Cancer Screening and DisabilityFor US women, breast cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer and the second leadingcause of cancer death.5 In ... AE Egensteiner,CA Hall,MB Cannell,... 被引量: 0发表: 0年 Folic Acid Supplementation for the Prevention of Neural Tube Defects: US...
GRAPHY SCREENING]]>Britta L. Anderson, PhD
What To Know About Breast Cancer ScreeningOct 15, 2020 By Devin Collins Updated October 17, 2024. When should you start having mammograms to screen for breast cancer, and how often should you have them? Ask 10 doctors this question and you might get 30 different answers. Ask a few trusted...
More alarming is the fact that about 40% of women - those with densebreast tissue - receive false and misleading "normal" reportsiii based on a screening tool which,for them, only detects an average of 27% (for film mammography) to 59% (for digitalmammography) of cancersiv.Tom Nerney...
Final USPSTF Recommendation on Breast Cancer Screening Lowers Starting Age from 50 to 40 Years, Highlights Racial DisparitiesHalsey, GracePatient Care (Online)
Patient counseling for breast cancer screening: Taking changes to USPSTF recommendations into accountdoi:10.12788/obgm.0334PATIENT complianceBREAST cancerPleasant, VershaOBG Management