The American Public Health Association,
Recognizing that colorectal cancer (CRC) is the nation's second leading cause of cancer mortality, and that incidence and mortality could drop significantly with universal screening because this cancer is prevented when the adenomatous polyps that transform into cancers are identified and removed, and survival improves when colorectal cancers are removed at an earlier stage; and
Recognizing that the nation's health improvement plan, Healthy People 2010, addresses colorectal cancer with two objectives: to reduce mortality from colorectal cancer, and to increase the proportion of adults who receive a colorectal cancer screening examination; and
Acknowledging that there are disparities in the incidence and mortality of CRC that affect under-served populations including African Americans and other minority groups and disparities would be addressed if screening tests with high positive and negative predictive values were universal; and
Acknowledging that evidence-based guidelines from national authorities recommend several effective screening methods for average-risk individuals age 50 and over and screening methods of the highest sensitivity (colonoscopy) for those at increased risk; and that screening has been determined to be cost effective; and
Recognizing that national screening rates for the eligible population remain under 50 percent (BRFSS, 2002) while Healthy People 2010 set a goal of 50 percent of the eligible population screened by 2010, and the American Cancer Society set a goal of 75 percent of the eligible population screened by 2015; , that over 90 percent of Americans age 55 and older visited a doctor for a check up within the prior two years, and there exists sufficient capacity to screen the entire population with fecal occult blood testing (FOBT) and follow-up colonoscopy (for all positives) within one year's time; and that quality standards disseminated for health plans by the National Committee for Quality Assurance referred to as HEDIS measures now include colorectal cancer screening on the list of reportable measures to be publicly reported in 2006; and furthermore
Recognizing that barriers to screening persist and vary by region of the country, and include lack of health insurance, lack of coverage for CRC screening, poor availability of screening and diagnostic services due to inadequate reimbursement for primary care services, , limited supply of endoscopists, lack of up-to-date knowledge, and fragmentation and lack of continuity in the delivery system; therefore APHA:
Urges the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to: