The objective of this study is to evaluate the association between persistence with mammography screening and stage at breast cancer diagnosis in elderly Appalachia-West Virginia women diagnosed with first incident breast cancer. The study utilized West Virginia Cancer Registry-Medicare linked database to identify women age 70 and above diagnosed with first incident breast cancer in 2007. Persistence to mammography screening was defined as having had at least three mammography screenings before breast cancer diagnosis. A multiple logistic regression was conducted to assess the association between persistence with mammography screening and stage at breast cancer diagnosis in these women. Of the 221 elderly Appalachia-West Virginia women incl...
BACKGROUND Major national interventions occurred in the early and mid-1990s to increase mammography...
BACKGROUND: Prevention is instrumental to decreasing the mortality and morbidity of cancer. Since 19...
Increasing age is the primary risk factor for breast cancer, yet older women underutilize mammograph...
Previous studies on the association between mammography screening and stage at breast cancer (BC) di...
West Virginia (WV) which is the only state which lies entirely in Appalachia and which is predominan...
Despite lower breast cancer incidence rates, Appalachian women evidence lower frequency of screening...
Abstract One of every eight women in the United States will be diagnosed with breast cancer in...
BACKGROUND: Women age 65 years and older account for most newly diagnosed breast cancers and deaths ...
Age-related health disparities in breast cancer screening are a public health concern. From 2002 to ...
Between 1990 and 2002, breast cancer mortality rates decreased by over 2% each year. Regular screeni...
The status of mammography screening experience and factors related to utilization were examined in s...
Breast cancer risk increases with age, and disease mortality has a direct correlation to the stage o...
Aims: This study examines patterns of screening mammogram use, investigating the relationship of scr...
BACKGROUND: Older black women are less likely to undergo mammography and are more often given a diag...
In the U.S., guidelines recommend that women continue mammography screening until at least age 74, b...
BACKGROUND Major national interventions occurred in the early and mid-1990s to increase mammography...
BACKGROUND: Prevention is instrumental to decreasing the mortality and morbidity of cancer. Since 19...
Increasing age is the primary risk factor for breast cancer, yet older women underutilize mammograph...
Previous studies on the association between mammography screening and stage at breast cancer (BC) di...
West Virginia (WV) which is the only state which lies entirely in Appalachia and which is predominan...
Despite lower breast cancer incidence rates, Appalachian women evidence lower frequency of screening...
Abstract One of every eight women in the United States will be diagnosed with breast cancer in...
BACKGROUND: Women age 65 years and older account for most newly diagnosed breast cancers and deaths ...
Age-related health disparities in breast cancer screening are a public health concern. From 2002 to ...
Between 1990 and 2002, breast cancer mortality rates decreased by over 2% each year. Regular screeni...
The status of mammography screening experience and factors related to utilization were examined in s...
Breast cancer risk increases with age, and disease mortality has a direct correlation to the stage o...
Aims: This study examines patterns of screening mammogram use, investigating the relationship of scr...
BACKGROUND: Older black women are less likely to undergo mammography and are more often given a diag...
In the U.S., guidelines recommend that women continue mammography screening until at least age 74, b...
BACKGROUND Major national interventions occurred in the early and mid-1990s to increase mammography...
BACKGROUND: Prevention is instrumental to decreasing the mortality and morbidity of cancer. Since 19...
Increasing age is the primary risk factor for breast cancer, yet older women underutilize mammograph...