Hi @wingman. Thanks for joining us and asking our thoughts.
I am running a campaign at the moment for greater awareness of FREE mammography from 40 and also to reduce the active recruitment age from 50 to 45. It is called Can at 40. Do at 45. Here is the link to the campaign page: https://www.facebook.com/Can40Do45/
I would love you to have a look at the campaign and offer suggestions. If you are in agreement with our mission statements, I would love you to advocate for the campaign.
MISSION STATEMENTS:
To increase
awareness of FREE screening mammograms for women 40-49 provided by BreastScreen
Australia.
To lower the Australian
active recruitment age for screening mammography to 45.
One of the negating factors for mammography from 40 is breast density - your field. I am familiar with 'Informd' and have used some of this information in my campaign.
I really want Australian breast density rates for women 45-49. Everything I look at is 40-49 - of course the lower 40's will skew negatively away from probable lower breast density rates in 45-49 year olds. I believe breast density sits at about 40-50% for women over 50 and 50-60% for women under 50 - is that right Wendy?
Could you direct me to any breast density rates specific to 45-49 year olds?
With at 20% of BC's diagnosed in women 40-49, I believe there is a big hole in the screening system, with the vast majority of women in this age group unaware of their eligibility. GP's range from proactive encouragement to active discouragement re:screeening under 50, so the confusion out there is completely rife.
I've just read AIHW report on Screening mammography behaviours and stats released on Monday. The 40-49 year old data from this report just makes me even more passionate to continue on with this campaign.
Wendy, is there any further progress in the rest of the state and territory BreastScreens notifying women if their density has compromised the reading of their images (like WA)? What is the hold up? With a higher BC rate linked to higher breast density, it seems negligent not to inform women if they have dense breasts and for women to incorrectly believe that their mammogram has been useful.
Let me know if you would like more information or any campaign cards!!
Thank you for reading and considering my questions.
Warm Regards,
Jo Joyce
Founder: Can at 40. Do at 45.