April 8, 2014
New interactive tool “Screen70+” helps older women decide whether or not to have mammograms
The NZ Breast Cancer Foundation today launched Screen70+, an interactive online decision aid to help women over 70 – and
their GPS – decide if they should continue with screening mammograms.
Screen70+ is based on the work of Dr Mara Schonberg at Harvard Medical School. It looks at a woman’s overall health and
life expectancy, along with breast cancer risk and the pluses and minuses of screening.
“Our research shows that 90% of women don’t realise their breast cancer risk is higher in their seventies than it was in
their fifties,” said NZ Breast Cancer Foundation chief executive Van Henderson.
Free screening with BreastScreen Aotearoa stops at age 69. In Australia, free mammogram screening was extended to age 74
last year, and in the UK, a large-scale trial of breast screening to age 73 is underway. The UK Public Health Office
recently launched a “Don’t assume you’re past it” campaign aimed at women over 70.
“We’re getting more calls to our advice line from older women wondering whether they should be continuing with
mammograms,” Van Henderson said. “We think it’s an important conversation to be having.”
Historically, arguments against screening older women have been based on the likelihood of other medical conditions
being more likely than breast cancer to contribute to mortality. But a New Zealand woman aged 70 in 2014 is likely to
live to 89, twenty years after her last free mammogram, and people increasingly expect to say fit and active for longer.
70% of the women surveyed for the NZBCF by Colmar Brunton rated their health as good or excellent.
The NZBCF wants women to be aware of their breast cancer risk as they age, to be aware of all the potential symptoms of
breast cancer, and to continue with mammograms while they’re in good health.
“Not everyone wants to continue with screening, and that’s very much an individual woman’s choice,” said Van Henderson.
“But we need to know our risk, and make an informed decision. If you’re in good health, then that decision might be the
same one you made in your fifties. So many older women lead active lives, playing a vital role in their family and their
community, we want them taking good care of themselves.”
The Screen70+ online decision aid is available at www.nzbcf.org.nz/OlderWomen
About NZBCF
The New Zealand Breast Cancer Foundation is a not-for-profit organisation that depends on individual donations,
community fundraising, grants from trusts and foundations and partnerships with business for its work in breast cancer
education and awareness, medical research and training grants, advocacy, and supporting women with breast cancer. The
NZBCF’s programmes are evidence-based, overseen by its medical advisory committee. The pink ribbon symbol is a trademark
of the NZBCF in New Zealand.
ENDS