Mammograms and breast cancer. (What You Need To Know About).If you are 40 or older, you are at risk for breast cancer. A mammogram mammogram /mam·mo·gram/ (mam´o-gram) a radiograph of the breast. mam·mo·gram n. An x-ray image of the breast produced by mammography. every 1-2 years can help find this disease early and can lower your chances of dying of breast cancer. What Do I Need to Know? Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women in the United States. In 2001, an estimated 192,200 American women were diagnosed with breast cancer for the first time and 40,200 women died from the disease. If you are 40 or older, you are at risk for breast cancer. A mammogram every 1-2 years can help find this disease early and can lower your chances of dying of breast cancer. Who Should Have Regular Mammograms? The higher your risk of breast cancer, the more likely you are to benefit from regular mammograms. Your risk of breast cancer increases with your age after age 40. Among other factors that increase your risk is having a sister or mother who has breast cancer. Are There Any Drawbacks to Mammograms? Mammograms may not find all breast cancers. Also, they may suggest that you have cancer when you really do not. These false-positive results could lead to unnecessary tests or surgery. What Should I Do? Ask your doctor, nurse, or other health care provider whether you should have regular mammograms and how often. Background The What You Need To Know series provides a summary of recommendations from the work of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF USPSTF US Preventive Services Task Force ), sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, n.pr formerly known as the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research, this agency researches the quality of medical care and health services. (AHRQ AHRQ, n.pr See Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. ). The USPSTF is an independent panel of experts in the fields of family medicine, obstetrics-gynecology, pediatrics, nursing, prevention research, and psychology. The Task Force reviews research on a wide range of preventive services, including screening, counseling, and using medications to prevent disease, then makes recommendations for the public. This fact sheet is part of Put Prevention Into Practice (PPIP PPIP Put Prevention Into Practice PPIP Provincial Parental Insurance Plan (Canada) PPIP Pulse Polio Immunisation Programme PPIP Program Protection Implementation Plan PPIP Private Practice in Pennsylvania (Yahoo! group) ), a national program sponsored by AHRQ to increase the delivery of USPSTF-recommended clinical preventive services clinical preventive service Managed care A health care service delivered in clinical settings for the purpose of preventing the onset or progression of a health condition or illness in the primary care setting. Select for more information about PPIP and PPIP tools. For More Information To order more copies of this fact sheet or other PPIP material for patients, clinicians, or office systems, call the AHRQ Publications Clearinghouse: Phone: 1-800-358-9295 Outside the United States: (410) 381-3150 Toll-free TDD (Time Division Duplexing) A transmission method that uses only one channel for transmitting and receiving, separating them by different time slots. No guard band is used. Contrast with FDD. See also TDD/TTY. TDD - Telecommunications Device for the Deaf service; hearing impaired only: 888-586-6340 AHRQ Publication Number APPIP APPIP Associação Portuguesa de Pais Intervenientes em Prevenção APPIP Aspirin for the Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Events APPIP Asian American Pacific Islanders in Philanthropy 02-0014 Current as of February 2002 Internet Citation: What You Need To Know About Mammograms and Breast Cancer. Fact Sheet. AHRQ Publication Number APPIP 02-0014, February 2002. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/brcneed2.htm |
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