50 percent of adults don't get colonoscopy

Published: Dec. 17, 2007 at 11:28 AM

WASHINGTON, Dec. 17 (UPI) -- U.S. adults age 50 and older are advised to get a a colonoscopy, a screening test for colon cancer, but only about 50 percent do, a government report said.

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality also found nearly 67 percent of Hispanics age 50 and older reported they have never had a screening colonoscopy, compared to 47.1 percent of whites and 55.8 percent of blacks.

Seventy-seven percent of uninsured adults between the ages of 50 and 64 reported they have never had a screening colonoscopy compared to people with private insurance -- 54.1 percent -- or people covered by Medicaid and other public coverage -- 61 percent.

About half of those age 65 and older on Medicare plus an additional public insurance reported never having had a screening colonoscopy.

However, 45 percent of those over age 65 only on Medicare reported a colonoscopy and 34.6 percent of people who had Medicare plus some private insurance reported never having had a screening colonoscopy.

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommends that all people age 50 and over be screened for colon cancer.

© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Roethlisberger to miss Ravens game (10 min)
Brain study points to jet lag help (24 min)
Masseuse reaches out and touches someone (32 min)
COL FB: Virginia Tech 42, Virginia 13 (35 min)
Hotels hope cyber-shoppers will check in
Sheep shoppers caught on camera
COL FB: Florida 37, Florida State 10
fark
Every year parents struggle with which toys to buy their kids for Christmas. Well, here's fifteen...
Old & busted: Bloggers steal from MSM. New hotness: Bloggers report actual news while MSM covers...
The Teflon Son: John Gotti Jr. not convicted again
New England's last military air base shuts down. In case anyone from the Soviet Union is reading...
Photoshop this building under wraps
The 50 most interesting Wikipedia articles