Fifteen years of bowel cancer screening policy in Australia: putting evidence into practice?

RIS ID

110950

Publication Details

Flitcroft, K. L., Salkeld, G. P., Gillespie, J. A., Trevena, L. J. & Irwig, L. M. (2010). Fifteen years of bowel cancer screening policy in Australia: putting evidence into practice?. Medical Journal of Australia, 193 (1), 37-42.

Abstract

  • Bowel cancer kills over 4000 Australians each year.

  • From the late 1980s to October 2005, research evidence guided the development of bowel cancer screening policy proposals, but political, financial and institutional constraints restricted implementation options.

  • Since 2006, the Australian Government has provided a limited bowel cancer screening program, based on what the government deems it can afford, rather than on evidence of what is required to implement a successful population-based screening program.
  • Even a partial program can be implemented in an evidence-based way, and failure to do so threatens to undermine the potential public health gains of a national bowel cancer screening program.
  • To realise the expected public health gains from a national bowel cancer screening program, bowel cancer screening policy should return to its evidence-based beginnings, starting with an analysis of Australian age-specific cost-effectiveness data.

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