Screening: Evidence and Practice

Screening

Evidence and Practice
 
Edition number: 2
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Date of Publication:
 
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Product details:

ISBN13:9780198805984
ISBN10:0198805985
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:302 pages
Size:232x154x16 mm
Language:English
120
Category:
Short description:

A comprehensive, practical, and accessible guide to screening programmes, for public health practitioners and anyone else involved in or with an interest in screening. It covers the concepts and evidence behind screening, how to make sound policy on screening, and how to plan and deliver high quality programmes at affordable cost.

Long description:
Screening programmes involve the systematic offer of testing for populations or groups of apparently healthy people to identify individuals who may be at future risk of a particular medical condition or disease, with the aim of offering intervention to reduce their risk.

For many years, screening was practised without debate, and without evidence, but in the 1960s serious challenges were raised about many of the screening procedures then being practised. Benefits and harms of screening must be measured in high quality trials, and the benefits of screening must be weighed alongside the negative side-effects. Concerns were raised about potential and actual harm arising when people without a health problem received dangerous and unnecessary investigations and treatments as a result of routine screening tests. Controversy raged, and it took some 50 years to achieve widespread recognition that evidence-based and quality assured programme delivery was essential, coupled with provision of balanced informed to enable informed choice for potential participants. Commercially motivated provision of poor quality and non-evidence based screening tests is increasing and screening remains a highly contested topic that has relevance in all health systems including for the general public and media.

This book serves as a practical and comprehensive guide to all aspects of screening. Following the international success of the first edition, this second edition brings extensive updates and new case study material. The first section deals with concepts, methods, and evidence, charts the story of screening back to 1861, and covers all aspects of a screening programme and how to research the full consequences. The second section is a practical guide to sound policy-making and to high quality delivery of best value screening. The controversies, paradoxes, uncertainties, and ethical dilemmas of screening are explained, and each chapter is packed with examples, real-life case histories, helpful summary points, and self-test questions. Reference is made to the NHS, a leader in screening, but the primary focus is on universal principles, making the book highly relevant across the globe.

This is the best textbook I have ever read on all facets of an often hotly debated topic and "aha" experiences are guaranteed. If only everyone involved in the many screening debates had read this book, we would be having more constructive and useful discussions, and take better decisions.
Table of Contents:
How screening started
What screening is, and is not
What screening does
Measuring what a screening programme does
Implementing screening programmes
Quality assuring screening programmes
Day-to-day management of screening progammes for public health practitioners and managers
Making policy on screening programmes