If there are any side effects I am not aware of, let's hear them. But when I prioritize my expenses, I will always pay for my health first, and in the absence of anything that has been proven to abide by loftier scientific standards, I will pay for the current standard of medical practice to be applied to my body.
Ah, but remember what the NHS thinks is cost-effective and what an individual considers to be cost-effective can tend to be wildly opposed. The NHS, as a service paid for out of general taxation, is interested in getting the biggest clinical bang for their bucks (or pounds sterling) and has some fairly guidelines on how long life should be extended and at what quality of life before it will throw extra money at a problem. As a service that covers the whole of the population it looks at broad population data rather than at individual outcomes.
Now, if I was an individual who had to pay out of pocket for my health care (which, as I'm a child of the NHS I thankfully do not) my views of what is and isn't cost-effective would be likely to not cover broad population data ;-)
So, for all you women with pushy doctors. Just tell them to do it every three years and to do it right.
Thank you Wegie, that sounds like the NCI data I recall.
Doing it right = having it done at a facility dedicated to mammography, read by a radiologist who specializes in reading mammograms.
All UK breast cancer screening is done in dedicated centres. The NHS may get many things wrong, it may quite often creak at the seams, but it has learnt the lessons of allowing non-specialists to deal with mammograms.
You might also like this
JAMA article. Basically, we seem to detect as much cancer as you do, but your recall rates are twice as high.