Skip to main content

Main menu

  • Home
  • Articles
    • Current
    • Published Ahead of Print
    • Archive
    • Supplemental Issues
    • Collections - French
    • Collections - English
  • Info for
    • Authors & Reviewers
    • Submit a Manuscript
    • Advertisers
    • Careers & Locums
    • Subscribers
    • Permissions
  • About CFP
    • About CFP
    • About the CFPC
    • Editorial Advisory Board
    • Terms of Use
    • Contact Us
  • Feedback
    • Feedback
    • Rapid Responses
    • Most Read
    • Most Cited
    • Email Alerts
  • Blogs
    • Latest Blogs
    • Blog Guidelines
    • Directives pour les blogues
  • Mainpro+ Credits
    • About Mainpro+
    • Member Login
    • Instructions
  • Other Publications
    • http://www.cfpc.ca/Canadianfamilyphysician/
    • https://www.cfpc.ca/Login/
    • Careers and Locums

User menu

  • My alerts
  • Log out

Search

  • Advanced search
The College of Family Physicians of Canada
  • Other Publications
    • http://www.cfpc.ca/Canadianfamilyphysician/
    • https://www.cfpc.ca/Login/
    • Careers and Locums
  • My alerts
  • Log out
The College of Family Physicians of Canada

Advanced Search

  • Home
  • Articles
    • Current
    • Published Ahead of Print
    • Archive
    • Supplemental Issues
    • Collections - French
    • Collections - English
  • Info for
    • Authors & Reviewers
    • Submit a Manuscript
    • Advertisers
    • Careers & Locums
    • Subscribers
    • Permissions
  • About CFP
    • About CFP
    • About the CFPC
    • Editorial Advisory Board
    • Terms of Use
    • Contact Us
  • Feedback
    • Feedback
    • Rapid Responses
    • Most Read
    • Most Cited
    • Email Alerts
  • Blogs
    • Latest Blogs
    • Blog Guidelines
    • Directives pour les blogues
  • Mainpro+ Credits
    • About Mainpro+
    • Member Login
    • Instructions
  • RSS feeds
  • Follow cfp Template on Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
OtherPractice

Age to stop?

Appropriate screening in older patients

Roland Grad, Guylène Thériault, Harminder Singh, James A. Dickinson, Olga Szafran and Neil R. Bell
Canadian Family Physician August 2019; 65 (8) 543-548;
Roland Grad
Associate Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at McGill University in Montreal, Que.
MD CM MSc CCFP FCFP
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
  • For correspondence: roland.grad@mcgill.ca
Guylène Thériault
Associate Vice Dean of Distributed Medical Education and Academic Lead for the Physicianship Component at Outaouais Medical Campus in the Faculty of Medicine at McGill University.
MD CCFP
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
Harminder Singh
Associate Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine and the Department of Community Health Sciences at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg and in the Department of Hematology and Oncology of CancerCare Manitoba.
MD MPH FRCPC
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
James A. Dickinson
Professor in the Department of Family Medicine and the Department of Community Health Sciences at the University of Calgary in Alberta.
MB BS PhD CCFP FRACGP
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
Olga Szafran
Associate Director of Research in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Alberta in Edmonton.
MHSA
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
Neil R. Bell
Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Alberta.
MD SM CCFP FCFP
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
  • Article
  • Figures & Data
  • eLetters
  • Info & Metrics
  • PDF
Loading

I focus particularly on the issue of patient preference, because many of my elderly patients would be insulted if I recommended not getting a screening mammogram. After a woman reaches 75 years of age I address mammography screening only if the patient initiates the topic.1

How does the above strategy resonate with your practice style? In this article, we address a simple question: When should we stop screening our patients for disease? The simple answer might be when the estimated risk of 10-year mortality is greater than the sum of the expected benefit of screening for disease. This solution reminds us of a quotation attributed to H.L. Mencken: “There is always a well-known solution to every human problem—neat, plausible, and wrong.”2

Many physicians want to do better than simply omitting any discussion about cancer screening in older adults who are beyond the upper age limit of screening recommendations. Healthy and active older patients might benefit from continued screening, while others have health problems that override the potential to benefit. Given the possible development of frailty and the certainty of death, delivering preventive health care to the elderly, therefore, requires careful thought.3,4 More than 10 years ago, Mangin and colleagues asked us to rethink the concept of preventive health care for the elderly: “We need a way to assess prevention and treatment of risk factors in the elderly that takes a wider perspective when balancing potential harms against putative benefits.”5 What then are the issues that we should consider in decision making about screening in older patients, and how should we discuss screening with older patients?

Case description

Rachel, a 75-year-old woman, is checking in for a routine visit. Sitting outside the office door is Rachel’s 78-year-old husband, whom you last saw a few months ago. Jacques is a sedentary man who has never smoked. He has a history of gout, hypertension, and is “slowing down,” but generally feels well. At his last visit, Jacques had a blood pressure check and you renewed his medication. You recall a brief exchange about the negative results of his fecal immunochemical test (FIT) done 2 years earlier. You did not request another test.

As you are wrapping up her visit, Rachel challenges your omission of another FIT test for Jacques. After all, her husband was screened for colorectal cancer in the past. Was it now because he was “too old”? That put you on the spot—is there a simple way to explain the cascade of interventions that follow positive screening test results? What about cancer overdiagnosis? Not to mention competing risks of mortality .…

Deciding if an older patient would benefit from screening

Table 1 highlights many of the issues and steps that should be considered in decision making about screening in older patients.1,4,6–10 Physicians will need to individualize their approaches to screening because of a range of life expectancies for older patients of a given age, the potential for harms from screening and uncertain benefits, and individual patient preferences and values.

View this table:
  • View inline
  • View popup
Table 1.

Steps for consideration and discussion when deciding if your older patient would benefit from screening

Overscreening

Overscreening refers to the use of a screening test at ages younger or older than recommended or at a greater frequency than recommended (shorter rescreening interval). Overscreening also occurs when asymptomatic persons are tested in the absence of high-quality evidence to support the idea that such interventions improve health.11 Overscreening in older patients is a problem, given that, past a certain age, patients could be more likely to experience harm from screening, while it usually takes many years for any mortality benefit from screening to accrue.12,13

To avoid overscreening in the elderly, one consideration rises to the top: life expectancy. Two other considerations—namely patient values and preferences and downstream thinking about the possible outcomes of screening—are equally important but apply to people of all ages.

Life expectancy

For decades, the life expectancy of Canadians has been slowly increasing (Figure 1).14 According to Statistics Canada,9 the average Canadian man at age 75 has 10 years of life expectancy; however, this typically includes some years of life in failing health. Table 2 provides estimates of median life expectancy at 75, 80, and 85 years, as well as a range of life expectancies influenced by the severity of comorbid conditions.7–9 Using this information can help to roughly estimate the life expectancy of your patient. The absolute risk of dying of breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer, and estimates of mortality reduction from screening over the remaining lifetime of persons with a life expectancy like your patient, is also provided. You could use these estimates to give you an order of magnitude of a possible benefit from screening. For some ages no reduction in cancer mortality can be expected from screening. For example, women at age 80 in the lowest quartile of life expectancy should expect no reduction in mortality from screening for cancer. Models to estimate life expectancy have been developed in Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom, and in testing some have been found to be fairly accurate.15,16 Such calculations can also be used to guide clinicians and might be of greater relevance to them than to their patients.

Figure 1.
  • Download figure
  • Open in new tab
Figure 1.

Change in life expectancy at birth in Canada since 1921

Reproduced from Statistics Canada with permission.14

View this table:
  • View inline
  • View popup
Table 2.

Estimates of life expectancy and mortality reduction from cancer screening at ages 75, 80, and 85 y: A) Breast, B) cervical, and C) colorectal cancer.

Downstream thinking about the possible outcomes of screening

As Muir Gray has pointed out, “The harm from a screening programme starts immediately; the good takes longer to appear.”17 If the screening test results were positive, would your patient be willing to go down the path of diagnostic confirmation leading to treatment? In screening for colorectal cancer, a positive FIT result will raise the need for colonoscopy with biopsy, and a positive biopsy result will raise the issue of fitness to thrive following hemicolectomy. Regardless of comorbidities, any person so diagnosed is now a “cancer patient” with all this can imply. While the concept of watchful waiting (or active surveillance) is gaining traction for some types of cancer (eg, prostate), it is not possible to know whether a specific patient was overdiagnosed with a slow-growing tumour that was never destined to cause harm to him or her. Cancer overdiagnosis is understandably a cause of much uncertainty.18

In our case, it seems reasonable to ask Jacques what he would like his doctor to do. Would he have a colonoscopy in the event of a positive FIT result? In an asymptomatic patient, the purpose of screening is to treat any disease uncovered. If further testing, biopsy, or treatment would be declined, then no screening should be done in the first place (primum non nocere).

Shared decision making and patient values and preferences

When should one stop cancer screening? To the best of our knowledge, there is no systematic review examining the values and preferences of older patients around this question. That said, the concern expressed by Rachel and Jacques is not trivial given the rising incidence of cancer in older people. The big question is whether screening Jacques would add life to his years or years to his life.3 Treatment could certainly lower his quality of life; and many patients underestimate the harms of medical intervention,19 which might be greater with advancing age. Although Jacques could live to age 88, he could be told the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care made a recommendation against screening for colon cancer after age 7520; however, this is based on low-quality evidence and is a conditional (or weak) recommendation, which implies a need to consider individual patient situations including values and preferences.

One way to approach this case is through shared decision making with the patient or family members. Shared decision making is a structured process to incorporate values and preferences into screening and treatment decisions.21 Shared decision making is especially important for implementation of conditional or weak recommendations.22 When bringing up the idea that cancer screening might no longer be beneficial given a patient’s life expectancy, using direct language, such as “You might not live long enough to benefit from this test,” can be perceived as overly harsh. Instead, a statement such as the following might be better received: “This test is unlikely to help you live longer. Your other health issues should take priority.” Jacques should be informed that, in screening with a fecal occult blood test, the lag time to benefit has been estimated to be 10.3 years for an absolute reduction of 1 death prevented for 1000 persons screened.12

In screening for colorectal cancer after age 75, guidelines from the United Kingdom and the United States recommend that the decision to screen be an individual one.13 For some cancers, there is international agreement among guideline committees on the age to stop (eg, age 75 for breast cancer).23 This guidance, as with the age to stop screening for colon cancer, is based on the absence of direct trial evidence to quantify the benefits and harms for women who outlive the recommended age for screening. In the absence of trial evidence, it is not easy to quantify the net benefit of preventive activities.

For patients who express a willingness to continue screening into advanced age, a values clarification exercise should be considered, once patients are informed of the uncertainty of benefit and possible harms. By values clarification we mean having a conversation about what matters most to our patients and their families in terms of health outcomes. This conversation can be helped by making time to work through a decision aid, such as the one on screening for breast cancer for women aged 75 to 84.24 Research suggests the greatest potential for improvement in practice is in having such a conversation.25

Framing the discussion on screening in older patients

Older adults might not consider life expectancy important in screening and might not welcome a discussion of their life expectancy when discussing screening.6 In our discussions with older adults, we should use phrases that are generally preferred by patients to explain cessation of routine cancer screening. Box 1 provides the phrases that were most and least preferred by older American adults.10

Box 1.

Phrases to explain stopping cancer screening

Most preferred by patients

  1. Your other health issues should take priority

  2. This test is not recommended for you by medical guidelines

  3. You are unlikely to benefit from this test

  4. We usually stop doing this test at your age

  5. You are at high risk of harm from this test

  6. We should focus on quality of life instead of looking for cancer

Least preferred by patients

  1. The doctor does not give an explanation

  2. The doctor does not mention this test

  3. You might not live long enough to benefit from this test

  4. This test can be very inconvenient to complete

  5. This test can be very uncomfortable

Adapted from Schoenborn et al.10

Physicians can provide their patients with decision aids as tools to supplement the discussion in the office.26 Implementing patient decision aids during the clinical encounter can be challenging, as many people have difficulty understanding the concept of risk.27–29 As we discussed in a recent article on organizing a practice for screening, there are compelling reasons to involve different members of the primary care team in screening activities.30 For example, we could further develop the role of nursing.

And in the end …

Rachel and Jacques wonder about his continuing to be screened for colorectal cancer. Using Table 2,7–9 you estimate Jacques to be at the 50th percentile for men about 80 years of age, giving him a good chance for more than 5 years of remaining life. You decide to invite Jacques for further discussion about the harms and benefits of continuing to be screened with the FIT. Further screening with the fecal occult blood test can minimally reduce the risk of death from colorectal cancer from about 18 to 17 per 1000 men at his age. He now understands the magnitude of a possible benefit from screening to be very small, with a 10-year lag time to benefit exceeding his estimated life expectancy. On the other hand, it is difficult to estimate the frequency of harms he might experience from screening. These harms include risks of dehydration from bowel preparation for colonoscopy, conscious sedation, bleeding or perforation from polyp removal, and the anesthesia of surgery. Based on this discussion, Jacques and Rachel decide to decline further screening.

There comes a time when many patients will have the good fortune to exceed the recommended age range for screening. For these people, we should consider an individualized shared decision making approach around the harms and benefits of screening.

Notes

Key points

  • ▸ Older adults are at particular risk of harm from overscreening. This problem includes the use of screening tests at an age older than recommended or at a greater frequency (shorter interval) than recommended. Overscreening also occurs when asymptomatic persons are tested in the absence of high-quality evidence to support screening with a specific test.

  • ▸ Any benefits from screening occur far into the future, while harms typically occur shortly after screening. Estimates of potential benefits and harms should be provided to older adults either as absolute risks or natural frequencies. Patient decision aids should be used to facilitate discussion of harms and benefits.

  • ▸ Physicians should be prepared for shared decision making with older adults about screening. These discussions need to consider individual patient life expectancy, as well as values and preferences. An estimate of individual patient life expectancy beyond 10 years is usually required for benefit from screening.

  • ▸ In framing discussions about stopping screening, physicians should consider patient communication preferences. Phrases indicating “your other health issues should take priority” or “the test is not recommended for you by medical guidelines” are most preferred, while phrases indicating “you will not live long enough to benefit from the screening test” or no discussion with the physician are least preferred.

Footnotes

  • Competing interests

    All authors have completed the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors’ Unified Competing Interest form (available on request from the corresponding author). Dr Singh reports grants from Merck Canada, personal fees from Pendopharm, and personal fees from Ferring Canada, outside the submitted work. The other authors declare that they have no competing interests.

  • This article is eligible for Mainpro+ certified Self-Learning credits. To earn credits, go to www.cfp.ca and click on the Mainpro+ link.

  • La traduction en français de cet article se trouve à www.cfp.ca dans la table des matières du numéro d’août 2019 à la page e329.

  • Copyright© the College of Family Physicians of Canada

References

  1. 1.↵
    1. Parnes BL,
    2. Smith PC,
    3. Conry CM,
    4. Domke H
    . Clinical inquiries. When should we stop mammography screening for breast cancer in elderly women? J Fam Pract 2001;50(2):110-1.
    OpenUrlPubMed
  2. 2.↵
    1. Wikiquote [website].
    H. L. Mencken. Los Angeles, CA: Wikimedia Foundation Ltd; 2019. Available from: https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/H._L._Mencken. Accessed 2019 May 22.
  3. 3.↵
    1. Clarfield AM
    . Screening in frail older people: an ounce of prevention or a pound of trouble? J Am Geriatr Soc 2010;58(10):2016-21. Epub 2010 Oct 1.
    OpenUrlPubMed
  4. 4.↵
    1. Abbasi M,
    2. Rolfson D,
    3. Khera AS,
    4. Dabravolskaj J,
    5. Dent E,
    6. Xia L
    . Identification and management of frailty in the primary care setting. CMAJ 2018;190(38):e1134-40. Erratum in: CMAJ 2019;191(2):E54.
    OpenUrl
  5. 5.↵
    1. Mangin D,
    2. Sweeney K,
    3. Heath I
    . Preventive health care in elderly people needs rethinking. BMJ 2007;335(7614):285-7.
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
  6. 6.↵
    1. Schoenborn NL,
    2. Lee K,
    3. Pollack CE,
    4. Armacost K,
    5. Dy SM,
    6. Bridges JFP,
    7. et al
    . Older adults’ views and communication preferences about cancer screening cessation. JAMA Intern Med 2017;177(8):1121-8.
    OpenUrl
  7. 7.↵
    1. Walter LC,
    2. Covinsky KE
    . Cancer screening in elderly patients: a framework for individualized decision making. JAMA 2001;285(21):2750-56.
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  8. 8.
    1. Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care [website].
    Published guidelines. Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care; 2019. Available from: https://canadiantaskforce.ca/guidelines/published-guidelines. Accessed 2019 May 22.
  9. 9.↵
    1. Statistics Canada.
    Life expectancy at various ages, by population group and sex, Canada. Ottawa, ON: Statistics Canada; 2019. Available from: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/t1/tbl1/en/tv.action?pid=1310013401. Accessed 2019 May 22.
  10. 10.↵
    1. Schoenborn NL,
    2. Janssen EM,
    3. Boyd CM,
    4. Bridges JFP,
    5. Wolff AC,
    6. Pollack CE
    . Preferred clinician communication about stopping cancer screening among older US adults: results from a national survey. JAMA Oncol 2018;4(8):1126-28.
    OpenUrl
  11. 11.↵
    1. Ebell M,
    2. Herzstein J
    . Improving quality by doing less: overscreening. Am Fam Physician 2015;91(1):22-4.
    OpenUrl
  12. 12.↵
    1. Lee SJ,
    2. Leipzig RM,
    3. Walter LC
    . “When will it help?” Incorporating lag time to benefit into prevention decisions for older adults. JAMA 2013;310(24):2609-10.
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  13. 13.↵
    1. US Preventive Services Task Force,
    2. Grossman DC,
    3. Curry SJ,
    4. Owens DK,
    5. Bibbins-Domingo K,
    6. Caughey AB,
    7. et al
    . Screening for colorectal cancer: US Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement. JAMA 2016;315(23):2564-75. Errata in: JAMA 2016;316(5):545, JAMA 2017;317(21):2239.
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  14. 14.↵
    1. Decady Y,
    2. Greenberg L
    . Health at a glance. Ninety years of change in life expectancy. Ottawa, ON: Statistics Canada; 2014. Catalogue no. 82-624-X. Available from: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/82-624-x/2014001/article/14009-eng.htm. Accessed 2019 May 22.
  15. 15.↵
    1. Cruz M,
    2. Covinsky K,
    3. Widera EW,
    4. Stijacic-Cenzer I,
    5. Lee SJ
    . Predicting 10-year mortality for older adults. JAMA 2013;309(9):874-6.
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  16. 16.↵
    1. Kobayashi LC,
    2. Jackson SE,
    3. Lee SJ,
    4. Wardle J,
    5. Steptoe A
    . The development and validation of an index to predict 10-year mortality risk in a longitudinal cohort of older English adults. Age Ageing 2017;46(3):427-32.
    OpenUrl
  17. 17.↵
    1. Muir Gray JA
    . Evidence-based healthcare and public health: how to make decisions about health services and public health. 3rd ed. Edinburgh, Scot: Churchill Livingstone, Elsevier; 2009.
  18. 18.↵
    1. Mahal BA,
    2. Butler S,
    3. Franco I,
    4. Spratt DE,
    5. Rebbeck TR,
    6. D’Amico AV,
    7. et al
    . Use of active surveillance or watchful waiting for low-risk prostate cancer and management trends across risk groups in the United States, 2010–2015. JAMA 2019;321(7):704-6.
    OpenUrl
  19. 19.↵
    1. Hoffmann TC,
    2. Del Mar C
    . Patients’ expectations of the benefits and harms of treatments, screening, and tests: a systematic review. JAMA Intern Med 2015;175(2):274-86.
    OpenUrl
  20. 20.↵
    1. Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care.
    Recommendations on screening for colorectal cancer in primary care. CMAJ 2016;188(5):340-8. Epub 2016 Feb 22.
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
  21. 21.↵
    1. Grad R,
    2. Légaré F,
    3. Bell NR,
    4. Dickinson JA,
    5. Singh H,
    6. Moore AE,
    7. et al
    . Shared decision making in preventive health care. What it is; what it is not. Can Fam Physician 2017;63:682-4. (Eng), e377–80 (Fr).
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
  22. 22.↵
    1. Thombs BD,
    2. Straus SE,
    3. Moore AE,
    4. Canadian Task Force for Preventive Health Care.
    Update on task force terminology and outreach activities. Advancing guideline usability for the Canadian primary care context. Can Fam Physician 2019;65:12-3. (Eng), e5–7 (Fr).
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
  23. 23.↵
    1. Ebell MH,
    2. Thai TN,
    3. Royalty KJ
    . Cancer screening recommendations: an international comparison of high income countries. Public Health Rev 2018;39:7.
    OpenUrl
  24. 24.↵
    1. The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute [website].
    Patient decision aids. Decision aid summary. Ottawa, ON: The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute; 2017. Available from: https://decisionaid.ohri.ca/AZsumm.php?ID=1908. Accessed 2019 May 22.
  25. 25.↵
    1. Diendéré G,
    2. Dansokho SC,
    3. Rocque R,
    4. Julien AS,
    5. Légaré F,
    6. Côté L,
    7. et al
    . How often do both core competencies of shared decision making occur in family medicine teaching clinics? Can Fam Physician. Vol. 65. 2019. p. e64-75. Available from: www.cfp.ca/content/cfp/65/2/e64.full.pdf. Accessed 2019 Jun 12.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  26. 26.↵
    1. Moore AE,
    2. Straus SE,
    3. Kasperavicius D,
    4. Bell NR,
    5. Dickinson JA,
    6. Grad R,
    7. et al
    . Knowledge translation tools in preventive health care. Can Fam Physician 2017;63:853-8. (Eng), e466–72 (Fr).
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
  27. 27.↵
    1. Scalia P,
    2. Durand MA,
    3. Berkowitz JL,
    4. Ramesh NP,
    5. Faber MJ,
    6. Kremer JAM,
    7. et al
    . The impact and utility of encounter patient decision aids: systematic review, meta-analysis and narrative synthesis. Patient Educ Couns 2019;102(5):817-41. Epub 2018 Dec 21.
    OpenUrl
  28. 28.
    1. Lang E,
    2. Bell NR,
    3. Dickinson JA,
    4. Grad R,
    5. Kasperavicius D,
    6. Moore AE,
    7. et al
    . Eliciting patient values and preferences to inform shared decision making in preventive screening. Can Fam Physician 2018;64:28-31. (Eng), e13–6 (Fr).
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
  29. 29.↵
    1. Bell NR,
    2. Dickinson JA,
    3. Grad R,
    4. Singh H,
    5. Kasperavicius D,
    6. Thombs BD
    . Understanding and communicating risk. Measures of outcome and the magnitude of benefits and harms. Can Fam Physician 2018;64:181-5. (Eng), 186–91 (Fr).
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
  30. 30.↵
    1. Wilson BJ,
    2. Bell NR,
    3. Grad R,
    4. Thériault G,
    5. Dickinson JA,
    6. Singh H,
    7. et al
    . Practice organization for preventive screening. Can Fam Physician 2018;64:816-20. (Eng), e477–82 (Fr).
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
PreviousNext
Back to top

In this issue

Canadian Family Physician: 65 (8)
Canadian Family Physician
Vol. 65, Issue 8
1 Aug 2019
  • Table of Contents
  • About the Cover
  • Index by author

Podcast

Print
Download PDF
Article Alerts
Sign In to Email Alerts with your Email Address
Email Article

Thank you for your interest in spreading the word on The College of Family Physicians of Canada.

NOTE: We only request your email address so that the person you are recommending the page to knows that you wanted them to see it, and that it is not junk mail. We do not capture any email address.

Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
Age to stop?
(Your Name) has sent you a message from The College of Family Physicians of Canada
(Your Name) thought you would like to see the The College of Family Physicians of Canada web site.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Citation Tools
Age to stop?
Roland Grad, Guylène Thériault, Harminder Singh, James A. Dickinson, Olga Szafran, Neil R. Bell
Canadian Family Physician Aug 2019, 65 (8) 543-548;

Citation Manager Formats

  • BibTeX
  • Bookends
  • EasyBib
  • EndNote (tagged)
  • EndNote 8 (xml)
  • Medlars
  • Mendeley
  • Papers
  • RefWorks Tagged
  • Ref Manager
  • RIS
  • Zotero
Respond to this article
Share
Age to stop?
Roland Grad, Guylène Thériault, Harminder Singh, James A. Dickinson, Olga Szafran, Neil R. Bell
Canadian Family Physician Aug 2019, 65 (8) 543-548;
Twitter logo Facebook logo Mendeley logo
  • Tweet Widget
  • Facebook Like
  • Google Plus One

Jump to section

  • Article
    • Case description
    • Deciding if an older patient would benefit from screening
    • Overscreening
    • Life expectancy
    • Downstream thinking about the possible outcomes of screening
    • Shared decision making and patient values and preferences
    • Framing the discussion on screening in older patients
    • And in the end …
    • Notes
    • Footnotes
    • References
  • Figures & Data
  • eLetters
  • Info & Metrics
  • PDF

Related Articles

  • Est-ce l’âge d’arrêter?
  • Preventive care at both ends of life
  • PubMed
  • Google Scholar

Cited By...

  • Screening backlogs: How to move forward
  • Retards dans le depistage: Que faire maintenant?
  • Assessing new screening tests: Panacea or profligate?
  • Evaluer les nouveaux tests de depistage: Une panacee ou du gaspillage?
  • What should educators teach to improve preventive health care?
  • Que devraient enseigner les educateurs pour ameliorer les soins de sante preventifs?
  • Faut-il partager ou non?: Quand la decision partagee est-elle la meilleure option?
  • To share or not to share: When is shared decision making the best option?
  • Preventive care at both ends of life
  • Google Scholar

More in this TOC Section

Practice

  • Managing type 2 diabetes in primary care during COVID-19
  • Effectiveness of dermoscopy in skin cancer diagnosis
  • Spontaneous pneumothorax in children
Show more Practice

Prevention in Practice

  • Debunking myths about screening
  • Screening for primary prevention of fragility fractures
  • Beware of overdiagnosis harms from screening, lower diagnostic thresholds, and incidentalomas
Show more Prevention in Practice

Similar Articles

Navigate

  • Home
  • Current Issue
  • Archive
  • Collections - English
  • Collections - Française

For Authors

  • Authors and Reviewers
  • Submit a Manuscript
  • Permissions
  • Terms of Use

General Information

  • About CFP
  • About the CFPC
  • Advertisers
  • Careers & Locums
  • Editorial Advisory Board
  • Subscribers

Journal Services

  • Email Alerts
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • RSS Feeds

Copyright © 2025 by The College of Family Physicians of Canada

Powered by HighWire