Tag Archive for Risk

Hit reset on cancer screening: ‘Tests not perfect’

WASHINGTON (AP) — It turns out that catching cancer early isn’t always as important as we thought.

Some tumors are too slow-growing to ever threaten your life. Some are so aggressive that finding them early doesn’t make much difference. And today’s treatments are much better for those somewhere in the middle.

Those complexities are changing the longtime mantra that cancer screening will save your life. In reality, it depends on the type of cancer, the test and who gets checked when.

“We can find cancer early. We can reduce the burden of the disease. But along the way, we’re learning our tests are not as perfect as we’d like,” says the American Cancer Society’s Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, a longtime screening proponent. “We’re learning that we’re now finding cancer that would in fact never cause harm.”

Now cancer specialists are struggling to find a new balance: to quit over-promising the power of early detection and to help people understand that the tests themselves have risks – while not scaring away those who really need it.

Least controversial are cervical and colorectal cancer screenings. They can spot pre-cancerous growths that are fairly easy to remove, although even some of those tests can be used too frequently. More serious questions surround other cancers – like which men, if any, should get a PSA blood test to check for prostate cancer, and whether women should start mammograms in their 40s or wait until they’re 50.

Also in question is whether doctors will be able to head off another looming controversy: Just which smokers and ex-smokers should get a pricey CT scan that can detect lung cancer but also is prone to false alarms? A recent study found the scans could save some lives. But guidelines aren’t due out until early next year that would decide who is at enough risk to outweigh the test’s potential harm – such as a risky, invasive biopsy to tell if a suspicious spot is cancer or just an old smoking scar.

Yet already people like 80-year-old Fred Voss of Sunderland, Md., are seeking out the tests.

“It was a big relief, and it gave me something to watch,” says Voss, who participated in the CT study but wanted to get tested again to make sure nothing had changed.

Today, guidelines for how to handle some of the most common cancer screenings conflict. And, they’re written for the average patient when many people may need a more customized decision, says Dr. Jeanne Mandelblatt of Georgetown University. She has studied breast cancer risk for a government panel that recommends most women not begin screening for the disease until age 50.

Consider this, she says: The average woman has a 3 percent lifetime risk of dying of breast cancer, a low risk for a disease that women find so scary. But the chances of getting breast cancer do gradually increase with age and other circumstances.

So if you’re 40 and have several risk factors – like dense breasts and close relatives with the disease – then you have the same risk as an average 50-year-old, not an average 40-year-old, and might consider earlier mammograms, Mandelblatt says. Few primary-care doctors have the time to go into that kind of detail.

Adding to the confusion are testimonials from cancer survivors that a screening saved their lives. Dartmouth researchers recently studied how often that’s true for mammograms, and estimated that about 13 percent of women in their 50s whose breast cancer is detected by the tests survive as a result.

What else plays a role? Treatments have dramatically improved in recent years, saving more lives. Also, increasingly powerful mammograms are detecting more low-risk tumors, the kind that probably wouldn’t have threatened a woman’s life in the first place.

Still, mammograms are “not perfect, but they’re the best we have,” cautions Mandelblatt. She thinks the Dartmouth estimate is somewhat low.

PSA tests for prostate cancer are a much tougher call. Last month, a government panel recommended an end to routine PSA screenings, a step further than other major medical groups that urge men to weigh the pros and cons and decide for themselves. But the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force found limited, if any, evidence that screening average men improves survival. That’s largely because so many men are diagnosed with slow-growing tumors that never would have killed them; still, they have treatments that can cause incontinence, impotence or even lead to death.

“We really – underline the word `really’ – have to pull back the messaging on prostate cancer,” says the cancer society’s Lichtenfeld, who himself isn’t sure of the test’s net worth. PSA testing took off on the basis of “blind faith” that they would work, not science, he says.

What really worries Lichtenfeld is that ever more powerful cancer screenings are being developed, before doctors have a way to tell exactly which early tumors should be removed.

“We have cells in our body that are abnormal all the time, and our bodies deal with it,” he says. “Our technology takes us further and further down the early-detection path, and we need to sort through all this.”

EDITOR’S NOTE – Lauran Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The Associated Press.

Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_MED_HEALTHBEAT_CANCER_SCREENING?SITE=AZPHG&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

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News in Brief: Body & Brain

When the brain learns to feel pain, kids? effect on dad testosterone and more in this week?s news

Web edition : 9:13 am

Baby?s first pain
Babies? brains start distinguishing a painful prick from a harmless touch just before they?re born, a new study shows. By monitoring electrical activity of premature babies? brains, researchers found that infants born before about 35 weeks of gestation didn?t distinguish between a painful heel prick (required for a blood sample) and a painless touch. In contrast, the brains of babies born on schedule showed pain-specific responses after a heel prick. The results may help doctors better understand and treat pain in babies, Lorenzo Fabrizi of the University College London and colleagues report September 27 in Current Biology.?Laura Sanders

Dads have lower testosterone
Fatherhood may put a damper on masculine hormones. Scientists knew that fathers have lower testosterone levels than childless men, but it wasn?t clear which came first. Lee Gettler and Christopher Kuzawa of Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., and their colleagues tried to solve that mystery by following a group of 624 men in the Philippines. Men with high testosterone levels at the beginning of the study were more likely to find a partner and father children. But those dads? testosterone levels dipped more with age than single non-fathers? levels did, the researchers report September 12 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The dip may lead to greater nurturing for children and better health for dads. ?Tina Hesman Saey

Odd valve means aorta risk
About 1.3 percent of people have an abnormal aortic heart valve, a defect that might heighten their risk of tearing the aorta, researchers report in the Sept. 14 Journal of the American Medical Association. The defective valve has two flaps instead of the normal three, and while it has been considered dangerous, the risk hadn?t been measured in a long-term study. Researchers at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston analyzed 16 years of health records for 416 patients who had the abnormal valve. This group was eight times as likely as the general population during that time to tear the aorta ? the huge artery leading out of the heart ? suggesting these patients should be monitored carefully.? ?Nathan Seppa

A quarter of North Americans get COPD
The lifetime risk of developing emphysema or another form of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease among North Americans is more than one in four, a team of Toronto-based researchers reported in the Sept. 10 Lancet. The scientists tapped into a database of adults in Ontario ? a diverse, multi-ethnic population ? who were free of COPD as of 1996 and monitored them for 14 years. At that point the researchers calculated that the risk of being diagnosed with COPD by age 80 was 27.6 percent. The risk was slightly higher for men than women, was more common in rural dwellers than in urban folks and greater in low socioeconomic groups than among high earners. ?Nathan Seppa

Kidney cancer tied to NSAIDs
Tapping into large medical databases, researchers at Harvard University have found that taking nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs may hike a person?s risk of kidney cancer. The researchers used questionnaires to get a ?snapshot? of medication use among nearly 50,000 men and more than 77,000 women starting in the 1980s or 1990s. About 20 years later the NSAID users were slightly more likely to develop kidney cancer, but not if they used the drugs for less than four years and only marginally if they used them for four to 10 years. Those taking NSAIDs for at least 10 years had roughly two to five times the risk as nonusers, the scientists reported in the Sept. 12 Archives of Internal Medicine. Kidney cancer strikes about 10 in 100,000 women and about 20 in 100,000 men annually. Taking aspirin or acetaminophen didn?t appear to impart any added kidney cancer risk. ?Nathan Seppa

Found in: Body & Brain

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/334525/title/News_in_Brief_Body_+_Brain

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Risk Management Specialist ? Corporate Office Opportunity …

Premier Health Care Services Corporate Office

Premier Health Care Services

Premier Health Care Services, Inc., a regional leader in Emergency Medicine Physician Services and Emergency Department Management, is committed to providing quality care to patients, superior service to customers, and promoting high ethical standards in the way we conduct our daily activities. We have an immediate need for an enthusiastic, dependable Risk Management Specialist to join our team of professionals and serve our customers.

This person will be responsible for, but not be limited to, coordinating commercial and captive insurance coverage and risk financing with the Chief Clinical Risk Officer (CCRO); administering the risk management program on a day-to-day basis; managing all risk management databases including physician database, insurance, STARS, and credentialing confirmations; and investigating and handling non-litigated claims to conclusion at the request of the CCRO.

Minimum Requirements

  • Ability to maintain confidentiality
  • Ability to handle multiple, competing priorities
  • Ability to meet deadlines
  • Possess strong interpersonal and communication skills and ability to work effectively with a wide range of constituencies in a diverse community
  • Strong knowledge of and experience with MS Office products, including database management systems
  • Ability to foster a cooperative work environment
  • Experience in the healthcare industry preferred

The duties listed above are intended only as illustrations of the various types of work that may be performed. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related, or a logical assignment to the position.

Education:

  • High school diploma
  • Bachelor?s degree in business, risk management, or insurance preferred
  • ARM or CPHRM highly desired

In exchange for your skills and expertise, Premier offers a highly competitive base salary and incentive program, as well as a friendly, professional working environment. We offer an excellent benefits package, including a 401(k) program and pension plan. For more information on who we are, check us out at www.premierhcs.net. Premier Health Care Services, Inc. is proud to be an Equal Opportunity Employer. For confidential consideration, please reference job code PHCS-RMS-0067 and forward your resume, salary requirements, and cover letter to:

Melissa Roderick, Vice President, Human Resources
mroderick@phcsday.com

Mailing Address
Premier Health Care Services
Attn: Melissa Roderick
Human Resources Manager
332 Congress Drive
Dayton, OH 45459

Click here to find out more about Premier Health Care Services.

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Source: http://premierhcs.wordpress.com/2011/08/25/risk-management-specialist-corporate-office-opportunity/

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