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Danish Women Make Decisions about Participation in Breast Cancer Screening prior to Invitation Information: An Online Survey Using Experimental Methods.

Eeva-Liisa RøssellHilary Louise BekkerMara A SchonbergIvar Sønbø KristiansenSigne BorgquistEeva-Liisa Røssell Johansen
Published in: Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making (2024)
Almost all women of prescreening age (44-49 y) in our study wanted to participate in the Danish national mammography screening program starting at age 50 y.Early decision making represents a barrier for informed decision making as women in this study had intentions to participate in breast cancer screening prior to receiving an official screening invitation, and therefore, providing information at the time of screening invitation may be too late to support informed decision making.Very few women rejected screening participation; however, more women rejected screening when the information was framed as an active choice between having or declining breast cancer screening (continue with usual care) compared with presenting only the option of screening with no description of the alternative.Two-thirds of women reading the screening information in this study had unchanged attitudes toward screening after reading the presented information.
Keyphrases
  • decision making
  • polycystic ovary syndrome
  • palliative care
  • type diabetes
  • pregnant women
  • quality improvement
  • metabolic syndrome
  • chronic pain
  • young adults