- Wilson JM, Jungner G. The principles and practice of screening for disease. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization; 1968. (Public Health Papers no. 34)
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Screening, in general, is using a test to find a specific disease or condition at an early point in the course of the disease. There are multiple types of screening tests available that are useful in finding several types of cancer.
Finding cancer early increases a patient’s chances of being cured. Additionally, less treatment(TREET-MINT) — Techniques to help eliminate or control a disease may be needed to fight the cancer, and the treatment may not be as harsh.
Screening tests to find breast cancer(BRE-ST CAN-SIR) — An abnormal growth that originates from breast tissue, lung cancer(LUNG CAN-SIR) — Abnormal growth that originates from lung tissue, cervical cancer(SIR-VEH-KIL CAN-SIR) — Abnormal growth that originates from cervical tissue, and colon cancer(COOL-IN CAN-SIR) — Abnormal growth that originates from colon tissue are most commonly recommended to the appropriate groups of people. Prostate cancer(PRAH-STATE CAN-SIR) — Abnormal growth that originates from prostate tissue screening can be performed, but the benefits are more controversial.
Discuss with your doctor which specific screening tests will benefit you. The medical community does not always agree on which tests truly offer benefits when looking for a particular disease. Furthermore, recommendations vary based age and risk for that cancer, so the recommendations for each test change frequently. However, the medical community does agree that there are clear benefits for certain screening tests (like the ones listed above).
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Many people think doctors should always be able to find a condition or cancer early. However, very few conditions can actually be found through screening. Screening recommendations involve complex evaluation of risks to both patients and society.
For example, the cost of screening plays a role. Think about breast cancer—every woman over the age of 45 (if not younger) is supposed to be screened every 2 years (if not more often). That’s a lot of people who need to receive a test (over 30 million women a year)! And, unfortunately, every test comes with financial, emotional, and medical costs.
Find out if you have any of the top risk factors for breast cancer.
Medical associations evaluate published scientific studies to make general recommendations or guidelines. The test must prove it is effective for a large number of people, and the government and insurance carriers must agree with its benefits.
Your doctor uses these guidelines to determine which tests are appropriate for you.
The following are the (simplified) criteria a screening test must meet in order to be considered a screening test.1
In summary, a screening test needs to be relatively inexpensive, cause no significant harm, and be available to the people who need it. Once a condition is found, treatment needs to be available that will truly help the patient live longer.
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Michaela Hemsley
January 27, 2021
It’s good to know that cancer screening can be important since catching something like that early can help the patient’s chances of being cured. My family has a history of breast cancer, and I have been wondering about how I can watch out for that happening to me. I will have to look into getting a cancer screening soon so that we can make sure that everything looks good or we can catch it early if it doesn’t. https://medicalfirst.com/contact-us/