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The Role of the General Practitioner in Breast Cancer Screening

General practitioners play an important role in the success of the BreastScreen Queensland Program in the strategy to reduce mortality from breast cancer.

Although a woman does not require a General Practitioner's referral to attend for a free breastscreen, it is known that women are most likely to have a breastscreen if their doctor recommends it. Australian studies have shown that between 68 and 91 per cent of women will attend for screening following a recommendation from their general practitioner (Clover et al. 1996, Cover et al. 1992).

General practitioners can play a key role, not only during recruitment, but also during the screening and assessment stages of the BreastScreen Queensland Program. The general practitioner's role may be further continued to the management stage if a woman is diagnosed with breast cancer. The Screening and Assessment Pathway  shows this sequence of stages.

In general, the general practitioner's role throughout the screening and assessment pathway involves recruitment, screening, assessment, open biopsy, and ongoing management.

Recruitment

Screening

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Assessment

Open biopsy

Ongoing management

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Last Updated: 18 September 2006
Last Reviewed: 09 February 2009



 A GP with the caption - GPs play a key role

 General Practitioners can play a key
role, not only during recruitment, but
also during the screening and
assessment stages of the BreastScreen
Queensland Program.