The Benefits Of Cancer Screening Overestimated By The Public: Survey
Main Category: Breast CancerAlso Included In: Prostate / Prostate Cancer
Article Date: 12 Aug 2009 - 4:00 PDT
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A public survey conducted in Europe found that the vast majority of people overestimate the life-saving benefits of breast and prostate cancer screening, according to a new study published online August 12 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Gerd Gigerenzer, of the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin, and colleagues conducted a survey of over 10,200 people from nine European countries to assess perceptions of cancer-specific mortality reduction associated with mammography and prostate-specific antigen screening, and to determine the sources of information they rely on.
The authors found that the majority of participants have a dramatic overestimation of the benefits of such tests, and that doctors and other sources of information appear to have little impact on improving knowledge of the level of benefit. Ninety-two percent of women overestimated the benefit of mammography screening by at least one order of magnitude or reported they did not know; 89% of men overestimated the benefit of prostate-specific antigen screening or did not know.
"Knowing the benefit of a treatment is a necessary condition for informed consent and rational decision making," the authors write.
In an accompanying editorial, Lisa M. Schwartz, M.D., and Steven Woloshin, M.D. of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice in Hanover, N.H., point out that accurate screening messages should be more prominent and include risks associated with overdiagnosis and overtreatment.
The editorialists call some of the researchers' methods biased toward overestimation and question if participants are truly representative of the European Union, but do acknowledge the study's contribution. "These cautions…do not diminish the importance of the study…," they write. "We need to move from selling screening to helping people realize that screening is a genuine choice..."
Source:
Steve Graff
Journal of the National Cancer Institute
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16 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/160489.php>
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
No such thing as overdiagnosis in breast cancer
posted by Gail Perry on 12 Aug 2009 at 4:27 amThere is no such thing as "overdiagnosis" in breast cancer.
BREAST CANCER KLLS. The only question is how fast it kills. It is NEVER "over-diagnosed." Do the biopsy. If the cells are cancerous, you have breast cancer, period. Have it removed so early that some crackpots might call it "over-diagnosed" and rejoice, because breast cancer can be quite sneaky and can spread very, very early.
I just don't know what these researchers are thinking. While it's true that some tumors grow very slowly, that does not mean they should be ignored.
The story on prostate cancer is a little less clear, but since my father died of it I know it also can kill.
My God. We're having fits because of the new H1N1 flu virus, which only kills one in 100, and then we turn around and say that breast cancer is "over-diagnosed?"
What do we tell the women who die because of this nonsense -- "Sorry, some women don't die, and statistically there was a chance you wouldn't?"
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