In the United States, older women (aged \u3e /=65 years) continue to receive routine screening mammography surveillance, despite limited evidence supporting the benefits to this subpopulation. This article reviews screening mammography guidelines and the potential harms of such screening for older women in the United States. Published guidelines and recommendations on screening mammography for older women from professional medical societies and organizations in the United States were reviewed from the mid-20th century to present. Observational data were then synthesized to present the documented harms from screening mammography among older women. In 1976, the American Cancer Society recommended to screen all women aged \u3e /=40 years with ...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the (i) benefits, (ii) harms and (iii) costs of continuing mammographic screeni...
Background: The risks and benefits of mammography screening among women 40 to 49 years of age remain...
All major organizations publishing breast cancer screen-ing recommendations agree that women aged 50...
BackgroundApproximately half of new invasive breast cancer cases diagnosed each year in the United S...
BackgroundThe extent to which screening mammography (SM) recommendations in older women incorporate ...
BackgroundThe extent to which screening mammography (SM) recommendations in older women incorporate ...
Screening is a way of detecting disease early in an asymptomatic population. For cancer screening to...
Introduction: Women over 70 have low self referral rates for breast screening and most are unaware o...
Women 65 and older present a unique challenge to health professionals, particularly with respect to ...
Joshua Demb,1,2 Tomi Akinyemiju,3 Isabel Allen,1 Tracy Onega,4 Robert A Hiatt,1 Dejana Braithwaite2 ...
Background Screening mammography is controversial for elderly women because of an absence of efficac...
Dejana Braithwaite,1 Joshua Demb,1 Louise M Henderson2 1Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistic...
Objective: To assess the (i) benefits, (ii) harms and (iii) costs of continuing mammographic screeni...
Background Screening mammography is controversial for elderly women because of an absence of efficac...
BACKGROUND Major national interventions occurred in the early and mid-1990s to increase mammography...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the (i) benefits, (ii) harms and (iii) costs of continuing mammographic screeni...
Background: The risks and benefits of mammography screening among women 40 to 49 years of age remain...
All major organizations publishing breast cancer screen-ing recommendations agree that women aged 50...
BackgroundApproximately half of new invasive breast cancer cases diagnosed each year in the United S...
BackgroundThe extent to which screening mammography (SM) recommendations in older women incorporate ...
BackgroundThe extent to which screening mammography (SM) recommendations in older women incorporate ...
Screening is a way of detecting disease early in an asymptomatic population. For cancer screening to...
Introduction: Women over 70 have low self referral rates for breast screening and most are unaware o...
Women 65 and older present a unique challenge to health professionals, particularly with respect to ...
Joshua Demb,1,2 Tomi Akinyemiju,3 Isabel Allen,1 Tracy Onega,4 Robert A Hiatt,1 Dejana Braithwaite2 ...
Background Screening mammography is controversial for elderly women because of an absence of efficac...
Dejana Braithwaite,1 Joshua Demb,1 Louise M Henderson2 1Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistic...
Objective: To assess the (i) benefits, (ii) harms and (iii) costs of continuing mammographic screeni...
Background Screening mammography is controversial for elderly women because of an absence of efficac...
BACKGROUND Major national interventions occurred in the early and mid-1990s to increase mammography...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the (i) benefits, (ii) harms and (iii) costs of continuing mammographic screeni...
Background: The risks and benefits of mammography screening among women 40 to 49 years of age remain...
All major organizations publishing breast cancer screen-ing recommendations agree that women aged 50...