Effect of second timed appointments for non-attenders of breast cancer screening in England: a randomised controlled trial

The Lancet Oncology
P C AllgoodStephen W Duffy

Abstract

In England, participation in breast cancer screening has been decreasing in the past 10 years, approaching the national minimum standard of 70%. Interventions aimed at improving participation need to be investigated and put into practice to stop this downward trend. We assessed the effect on participation of sending invitations for breast screening with a timed appointment to women who did not attend their first offered appointment within the NHS Breast Screening Programme (NHSBSP). In this open, randomised controlled trial, women in six centres in the NHSBSP in England who were invited for routine breast cancer screening were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive an invitation to a second appointment with fixed date and time (intervention) or an invitation letter with a telephone number to call to book their new screening appointment (control) in the event of non-attendance at the first offered appointment. Randomisation was by SX number, a sequential unique identifier of each woman within the NHSBSP, and at the beginning of the study a coin toss decided whether women with odd or even SX numbers would be allocated to the intervention group. Women aged 50-70 years who did not attend their first offered appointment were eligible fo...Continue Reading

Citations

Nov 9, 2018·Journal of Women's Health·Sarah W Huf, Shivan J Mehta
Jul 25, 2019·Journal of Cancer Survivorship : Research and Practice·Veda ZabihPaul C Nathan
Oct 20, 2020·Psychology & Health·Sandro Tiziano StoffelChristian von Wagner
Jun 13, 2021·The Breast : Official Journal of the European Society of Mastology·Magdalena LagerlundSophia Zackrisson
Aug 12, 2021·Future Oncology·Ben Young, Kathryn A Robb

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