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2003 APR 10 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- Women with a history of breast cancer are more likely to get a mammogram than women with no previous cancer, according to a new study.
However, insurance also plays a big role in whether women decide to get a mammogram: Women in the study who had public insurance like Medicare or a combination of public and private insurance were less likely to get a mammogram than women with private insurance and women with no insurance.
"The lower likelihood of mammography utilization among women with public sources of insurance is alarming," say Jeffrey S. Legg, PhD, RT, of Virginia Commonwealth University and colleagues.
Although women with previous breast cancer have a 1% increased chance per year of developing cancer in the other breast, earlier studies provide conflicting information about whether a history of cancer makes a women more likely to choose regular mammograms.
Researchers studied 830 women age 50 and older using a national database that included women with a history of breast cancer and those with no previous cancer. They found that women with a history of ...