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Screening Mammography Rates Are Below Guideline Recommendations

DENVER – Even before the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force issued its controversial 2009 recommendation, only a slim majority of women with health insurance were getting even one mammogram every 2 years.

Rhoda Baer/National Cancer Institute
In the United States, the rate of mammography – be it standard, digital, or MRI – remains well below recommendations.     

Thus, the utilization rate for mammography – be it standard, digital, or MRI – remains well below recommendations, Judie Mopsik said at the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association.

She presented an analysis of longitudinal medical claims data for 4.5 million women aged 18 years or older covered by a national health insurance company with 20 million enrollees. These were women with full access to preventive care. During the study period, 2006-2008, 1.9 million of the 4.5 million women had a mammogram.

The mammographic screening rate during this 2-year window was 9% among 18- to 39-year-olds. The rate was 53% among women aged 40-49 years, a group for whom routine screening isn’t recommended in the latest USPSTF guidelines. At the time of the study, however, the USPSTF’s previous guidelines were in effect, which recommended mammography every 1-2 years starting at age 40, noted Ms. Mopsik, who is president of the Council of Professional Associations on Federal Statistics and vice president for business development at the Lewin Group in Falls Church, Va.

The screening rate within the 2-year study window was 59% among women in their 50s, for whom mammography is routinely recommended at least once every 2 years. And the screening rate was 49% in women aged 60 years or older.

Among women who had two or more mammograms during the 2-year study period, the majority – 56% to 84% depending upon the age group – had their most recent mammogram within 11-18 months of their prior mammogram. This is the population of assiduous adherents to preventive medicine likely to find particularly troubling the USPSTF’s reversal of its longtime guidelines calling for screening every 1-2 years, particularly since the American Cancer Society still recommends starting annual mammography at age 40 years.

This study was supported by the National Center for Health Statistics. Ms. Mopsik declared that she has no relevant financial conflicts of interest.

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DENVER – Even before the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force issued its controversial 2009 recommendation, only a slim majority of women with health insurance were getting even one mammogram every 2 years.

Rhoda Baer/National Cancer Institute
In the United States, the rate of mammography – be it standard, digital, or MRI – remains well below recommendations.     

Thus, the utilization rate for mammography – be it standard, digital, or MRI – remains well below recommendations, Judie Mopsik said at the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association.

She presented an analysis of longitudinal medical claims data for 4.5 million women aged 18 years or older covered by a national health insurance company with 20 million enrollees. These were women with full access to preventive care. During the study period, 2006-2008, 1.9 million of the 4.5 million women had a mammogram.

The mammographic screening rate during this 2-year window was 9% among 18- to 39-year-olds. The rate was 53% among women aged 40-49 years, a group for whom routine screening isn’t recommended in the latest USPSTF guidelines. At the time of the study, however, the USPSTF’s previous guidelines were in effect, which recommended mammography every 1-2 years starting at age 40, noted Ms. Mopsik, who is president of the Council of Professional Associations on Federal Statistics and vice president for business development at the Lewin Group in Falls Church, Va.

The screening rate within the 2-year study window was 59% among women in their 50s, for whom mammography is routinely recommended at least once every 2 years. And the screening rate was 49% in women aged 60 years or older.

Among women who had two or more mammograms during the 2-year study period, the majority – 56% to 84% depending upon the age group – had their most recent mammogram within 11-18 months of their prior mammogram. This is the population of assiduous adherents to preventive medicine likely to find particularly troubling the USPSTF’s reversal of its longtime guidelines calling for screening every 1-2 years, particularly since the American Cancer Society still recommends starting annual mammography at age 40 years.

This study was supported by the National Center for Health Statistics. Ms. Mopsik declared that she has no relevant financial conflicts of interest.

DENVER – Even before the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force issued its controversial 2009 recommendation, only a slim majority of women with health insurance were getting even one mammogram every 2 years.

Rhoda Baer/National Cancer Institute
In the United States, the rate of mammography – be it standard, digital, or MRI – remains well below recommendations.     

Thus, the utilization rate for mammography – be it standard, digital, or MRI – remains well below recommendations, Judie Mopsik said at the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association.

She presented an analysis of longitudinal medical claims data for 4.5 million women aged 18 years or older covered by a national health insurance company with 20 million enrollees. These were women with full access to preventive care. During the study period, 2006-2008, 1.9 million of the 4.5 million women had a mammogram.

The mammographic screening rate during this 2-year window was 9% among 18- to 39-year-olds. The rate was 53% among women aged 40-49 years, a group for whom routine screening isn’t recommended in the latest USPSTF guidelines. At the time of the study, however, the USPSTF’s previous guidelines were in effect, which recommended mammography every 1-2 years starting at age 40, noted Ms. Mopsik, who is president of the Council of Professional Associations on Federal Statistics and vice president for business development at the Lewin Group in Falls Church, Va.

The screening rate within the 2-year study window was 59% among women in their 50s, for whom mammography is routinely recommended at least once every 2 years. And the screening rate was 49% in women aged 60 years or older.

Among women who had two or more mammograms during the 2-year study period, the majority – 56% to 84% depending upon the age group – had their most recent mammogram within 11-18 months of their prior mammogram. This is the population of assiduous adherents to preventive medicine likely to find particularly troubling the USPSTF’s reversal of its longtime guidelines calling for screening every 1-2 years, particularly since the American Cancer Society still recommends starting annual mammography at age 40 years.

This study was supported by the National Center for Health Statistics. Ms. Mopsik declared that she has no relevant financial conflicts of interest.

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Screening Mammography Rates Are Below Guideline Recommendations
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Screening Mammography Rates Are Below Guideline Recommendations
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U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, health insurance, mammogram, mammography, American Public Health Association, USPSTF, women's health
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U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, health insurance, mammogram, mammography, American Public Health Association, USPSTF, women's health
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FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN PUBLIC HEALTH ASSOCIATION

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Major Finding: The screening mammography rate within a 2-year study window was 59% for women in their 50s and 49% for women aged 60 years or older.

Data Source: Longitudinal medical claims data for 2006-2008 for 4.5 million women covered by a national health insurance company with 20 million covered lives and full access to preventive care.

Disclosures: The study was supported by the National Center for Health Statistics. Ms. Mopsik declared having no relevant financial interests.