Practice
Applying the 2011 Canadian guidelines for breast cancer screening in practice
Ellen Warner, Ruth Heisey and June C. Carroll
CMAJ November 06, 2012 184 (16) 1803-1807; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1503/cmaj.120392
Ellen Warner
From the Odette Cancer Centre (Warner), Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre; Women’s College Hospital (Heisey); and the Department of Surgical Oncology (Carroll), Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, Ont.
MD MScRuth Heisey
From the Odette Cancer Centre (Warner), Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre; Women’s College Hospital (Heisey); and the Department of Surgical Oncology (Carroll), Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, Ont.
MDJune C. Carroll
From the Odette Cancer Centre (Warner), Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre; Women’s College Hospital (Heisey); and the Department of Surgical Oncology (Carroll), Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, Ont.
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- (2012). Highlights. CMAJ, 184(16), 1759. Accessed May 06, 2024. Retrieved from http://www.cmaj.ca/content/184/16/1759.
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Applying the 2011 Canadian guidelines for breast cancer screening in practice
Ellen Warner, Ruth Heisey, June C. Carroll
CMAJ Nov 2012, 184 (16) 1803-1807; DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.120392
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- Article
- How is average risk defined?
- What has changed in the updated guidelines?
- Mammography screening in women aged 40–49 years
- Mammography screening for women aged 50–69 years
- Mammography screening for women aged 70–74 years
- Clinical breast examination
- How should screening be done for women at higher risk?
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