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Evid Based Nurs 14:32 doi:10.1136/ebn1139
  • Adult nursing
  • Cohort study

Repeat invitations to non-attenders increase uptake of colorectal cancer screening; incidence screening continues to detect important cancers

  1. Beverly Greenwald
  1. Angelo State University, Department of Nursing, San Angelo, Texas, USA
  1. Correspondence to Beverly Greenwald
    PO Box 10155, Fargo, ND 58106-0155, USA; beverly.greenwald{at}angelo.edu

Commentary on:

Colorectal cancer: preventable and treatable

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third leading cause of cancer deaths in men and women. CRC is preventable by polypectomy, and, with proper screening, it can be found in early stages when the disease is most treatable, minimising morbidity and mortality. The American Cancer Society recommends screening for average-risk adults to start at age 50, but about half of the people who should be screened are not screened. The faecal occult blood test (FOBT) is an inexpensive and convenient CRC screening option. A positive FOBT should be followed with a diagnostic colonoscopy.1

Benefits of repeated invitations for screening

Steele and associates extended …

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