What is screening ?
A process of identifying apparently healthy people who may be at increased risk of a disease or condition.
If a person is found to be at increased risk of a disease/condition, what are some steps which can be taken ?
Offered information, further tests and appropriate treatment to reduce associated risks or complications.
What are some of the main differences between screening and healthcare ?
Screening:
Healthcare:
Give 3 examples of screening programmes for each of adults, pregnant women, and infants.
Describe the age, M/F, and frequency of screening for bowel cancel and breast cancer.
Bowel Cancer:
Breast Cancer:
What are the requirements for the screening of a condition to be viable and effective ?
What does sensitivity calculate in screening programmes ? What is for the formula for it ?
What does specificity calculate in screening programmes ? What is for the formula for it ?
What is the characteristic of a highly sensitive screening programme ?
Detects most of the disease
Very few false negatives
What is the characteristic of a highly specific screening programme ?
Correctly detects no disease
Very few false positives
What is a positive predictive value ?
“Probability that subjects with a positive screening test truly have the disease.”
What is a negative predictive value ?
“Probability that subjects with a negative screening test truly don’t have the disease.”
What is the formula for positive predictive value ?
What is the formula for negative predictive value ?
How are Positive Predictible Value and Negative Predictible Value affected by prevalence ?
“If we test in a high prevalence setting, it is more likely that persons who test positive truly have disease than if the test is performed in a population with low prevalence.”
What are the potential benefits of screening ?
What are the potential harms of screening ?
What is the purpose of the Marmot Review of the UK Breast Screening Programme ?
Weights the benefits (e.g. deaths prevented) and harms (e.g. overdiagnoses ) of breast screening
What was the conclusion of the Marmot Review of the UK Breast Screening Programme ?
Significant benefits to the screening, so it should continue.
Communication about the benefits and harms with the women crucial.
What pieces of information which must be given to the patient before he/she can give informed consent to a screening procedure ?
What are some examples of biases in screening programmes ?
How can one measure the effectiveness of a screening ?
Randomised controlled trial
Time trend studies
Case control studies
Modelling studies
Compare breast, cervical, and bowel cancer in terms of incidence and mortality for different deprivation levels.
Bowel Cancer: Higher incidence and mortality for more deprived levels
Cervical cancer: More incidence and mortality for more deprived levels
Breast cancer: Slightly more incidence for less deprived levels, same mortality
Describe the potential impact of screening programmes on health inequalities ?