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What Most American Women Don't Know When It Comes to Breast Cancer Screening

What Most American Women Don't Know When It Comes to Breast Cancer Screening

Newsweek3 days ago
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
More than half of American women may be confused about when to start having regular mammograms to screen for breast cancer.
This is the finding of a survey by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg Public Policy Center, which revealed the greatest uncertainty among younger women.
Women with an average risk of breast cancer should start getting screened every two years from age 40 onwards, according to the latest guidance issued in April last year from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, an independent panel of medical experts.
Mammograms enable doctors to detect cancer early, before symptoms become visible. Regular screening has been shown to decrease the risk of dying from breast cancer.
Stock image of a woman undergoing a mammogram.
Stock image of a woman undergoing a mammogram.
peakSTOCK/iStock / Getty Images Plus
"Confusion can arise when medical guidance about detection of treatment changes, as it has in recent years with mammograms," said Annenberg Public Policy Center director Kathleen Hall Jamieson in a statement.
Recommendations have previously shifted from 40 up to 50 and then back down to 40 again. Confusing matters is how some medical groups offer different guidance. The American Cancer Society, for example, suggests that women start screening between 40–44, have mammograms annually from 45–54, and then every other year after that.
Jamieson added: "Our data suggest that the recommendation that such screening ordinarily start at 40 years old is not yet widely enough known."
A plot showing the results of the survey.
A plot showing the results of the survey.
Annenberg Public Policy Center
The survey—which was conducted back in late April this year on a sample of more than 1,653 U.S. adults—found that only 49 percent of respondents knew that women are recommended to start having mammograms every other year from the age of 40 onward.
Meanwhile, 10 percent said that screening should begin at age 20, 21 percent said age 30, 9 percent said age 50 and 11 responded that they weren't sure when they should start. (Each number is rounded to the nearest 1 percent, which accounts for why these figures do not add up to 100 percent.)
Breaking down responses by age, the survey results suggest that there is a greater uncertainty on this topic among younger women. Specifically, only 37 percent of women aged 18–29 knew the correct age to start screening.
In contrast, 72 percent of women aged 40–49, 63 percent aged 30–39 and 59 percent 50–74 knew that the current recommended age is 40.
Alongside this, 16 percent of women aged 18–29 and 11 percent aged 30–39 reported that they were not at all sure when to begin regular screening; this figure was just one percent for women aged between 40–49.
Among the 18–29 age group, the most commonly reported incorrect age for when to begin mammography was 30 (selected by 27 percent of women); this is a decade earlier than recommended.
However, the most common misconception among those aged 30–39 (that is, approaching the recommended starting age of 40) was 50 years old—a decade later than current recommendations.
Do you have a tip on a health story that Newsweek should be covering? Do you have a question about mammograms? Let us know via health@newsweek.com.
Reference
Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania. (2025). ASAPH W24 mammogram items. https://www.annenbergpublicpolicycenter.org/wp-content/uploads/APPC_ASAPH_Mammogram_W24_Topline.pdf
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Parents Told Newborn's Noises Are 'Normal'—Then Comes Devastating Diagnosis
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Parents Told Newborn's Noises Are 'Normal'—Then Comes Devastating Diagnosis

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Israeli airstrikes kill 14 Palestinians in Gaza and another 10 die seeking food
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The army had no immediate comment but has said it fires warning shots as a crowd-control measure and only aims at people when its troops are threatened. Another Palestinian was killed waiting in crowds for aid trucks in eastern Khan Younis, officials at Nasser Hospital said. The United Nations and other international organizations have been bringing in their own supplies of aid since the war began. The incident did not appear to be connected to GHF operations. Much of Gaza's population of over 2 million now relies on international aid after the war has largely devastated agriculture and other food sources and left many people near famine. Crowds of Palestinians often wait for trucks and unload or loot their contents before they reach their destinations. The trucks must pass through areas under Israeli military control. Israel's military did not immediately comment. 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Several hundred people have been killed and hundreds more wounded, according to Gaza's Health Ministry and witnesses. The U.N. human rights office says it has recorded 613 Palestinians killed within a month in Gaza while trying to obtain aid, most of them while trying to reach GHF sites. The war began when Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people and taking 251 others hostage. Israel responded with an offensive that has killed over 57,000 Palestinians, more than half of them women and children. according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which is led by medical professionals employed by the Hamas government. It does not differentiate between civilians and combatants, but the U.N. and other international organizations see its figures as the most reliable statistics on war casualties. ___ Kullab reported from Jerusalem. ___ Follow news of the war at

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