segunda-feira, 14 de maio de 2007

New Study Finds that Fewer U.S. Women Are Getting Mammograms - Associated Content

New Study Finds that Fewer U.S. Women Are Getting Mammograms - Associated Content: "According to a report by federal researchers that was released today, the percentage of U.S. women getting mammograms to screen for breast cancer has begun to drop after steadily rising for decades. The study, released by the National Cancer Institute along with the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), reveals that the overall rate that women are getting mammograms fell 4 percent between 2000 and 2005, the first decline since mammograms became standard practice in 1987.

While breast cancer experts speculated as to the cause of this trend, they all seemed to be alarmed by the fact that fewer women are getting mammograms. More than 200,000 women are diagnosed with breast cancer each year, and at least 40,000 die from the disease annually. Mortality rates have been improving because mammograms tend to catch the disease in earlier, more treatable stages. However, according to Nancy Breen of the American Cancer Society, 'If women are not getting mammograms, then their cancer may not be diagnosed until later stages, which could translate into higher mortality from breast cancer.'

According to the study, which consisted of a survey of 10,000 women, just 66 percent of women stated that they had gotten a mammogram in the last two years when asked in 2005, compared with 70 percent of"

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