
Kettering Health is teaming up with the Cincinnati Bengals to find cancer in its earliest stages.
Crucial Catch’s mission is to fight cancer through prevention, early detection, and risk reduction. Colon cancer is the third most diagnosed cancer and is rising in young adults. Fortunately, there is an effective screening tool for the prevention and early detection of colon cancer. Scheduling a colonoscopy can make all the difference.
Colon Cancer Awareness
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What Is a Colonoscopy?
During a colonoscopy, a gastroenterologist uses a small camera on a flexible tube, known as a colonoscope, to look at the inside of your colon. Your gastroenterologist will check for any polyps—abnormal growth of tissue—along the walls of your colon.
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Who Should Get Screened?
Both men and women should begin regular colon cancer screenings at age 45. For those younger than 45, your doctor might recommend a colonoscopy after ruling out other possibilities if you experience symptoms such as sudden changes in bowel movements or blood in your stool.
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Why Are Colonoscopies Important?
Most polyps are benign, but some can become cancerous tumors if left untreated. Polyps found during a colonoscopy can usually be removed during the screening. Colonoscopies are the best tool for the early detection and prevention of colon cancer.
Colon Cancer Risk Quiz
Scheduling Your Annual Wellness Visit
Did you know there is an appointment with your primary care provider that can make sure you’re getting the screenings you need?
Your annual wellness visit with your primary care provider is the best route to getting the screenings you need.
Schedule An Annual Wellness Visit
Cancer Screening & Prevention
Crucial Catch’s mission is to fight cancer through early detection and risk reduction. Through prevention resources, screenings, and world-class cancer services we are committed to helping you be your best.
A breast cancer diagnosis changes lives in an instant. In the US, the average risk of a woman developing breast cancer sometime in her life is 13%.
The best breast-cancer outcomes come with detecting your cancer early and receiving treatment early on in your battle. Breast cancer that is found early is typically smaller and has not spread to other areas of the body. Regular screenings are the best way to detect breast cancer early.
Screening Guidelines:
- Women age 40 and over should have a screening mammogram every year.
- Women age 55 and older are recommended a mammogram screening every two years.
- In some instances you may need to begin mammograms earlier, such as if you feel a lump or if you have a family history of breast cancer. Please talk to your doctor regarding your personal risk.
Cervical Cancer can often be found early, and when found early is one of the most successfully treatable cancers. Cervical cancer can also be prevented with the HPV Vaccine.
Teens and young adults through age 26 years are recommended to get the HPV Vaccine. HPV can cause 5 types of cancer. While HPV cannot be treated, it can be prevented by getting the vaccine.
Screening Guidelines:
- Women ages 21-29 should schedule a Pap test every three years.
- From age 30 to 69, women should schedule an HPV and Pap test every five years or just a Pap test every three years.
- Women over 66 who receive negative HPV and Pap tests can consider stopping screenings.
Regular screenings provide necessary opportunities to find colon cancer at an early stage before it has spread.
Our screenings enable us to catch changes in a patient’s colon and rectum—such as benign growths or polyps—before they turn cancerous (malignant). Finding them early can mean the difference in years lived.
Screening Guidelines:
Men and women 45 and older should schedule a fecal immunochemical test or fecal occult blood test every year. Other options include:
- Stool DNA test every three years
- Flexible sigmoidoscopy every five years
- Colonoscopy every 10 years
- CT colonography (virtual colonoscopy) every five years
We know that early detection can mean the difference between a positive or negative prognosis. So, we’ve developed a low-cost, early detection program for those at risk of lung cancer.
Our program includes a low-dose lung CT screening that has proven to detect 85% of early-stage lung cancers.
Screening Guidelines:
- Are 50 to 80 years old and in fairly good health, and
- Currently smoke or have quit in the past 15 years, and
- Have at least a 20 pack-year smoking history. (This is the number of packs of cigarettes per day multiplied by the number of years smoked. For example, someone who smoked 2 packs a day for 10 years [2 x 10 = 20] has 20 pack-years of smoking, as does a person who smoked 1 pack a day for 20 years [1 x 20 = 20].)
Prostate cancer is one of the most common cancers among men. It is highly treatable and has a high survival rate. Even so, it is scary to be diagnosed with prostate cancer, and we recognize that. Our cancer team at Kettering Health is here to help you get through this.
The American Cancer Society (ACS) recommends to talk with your health care provider about whether to be screened for prostate cancer.
The discussion about screening should take place at:
- Age 50 for men who are at average risk of prostate cancer and are expected to live at least 10 more years.
- Age 45 for men at high risk of developing prostate cancer. This includes African Americans and men who have a first-degree relative (father or brother) diagnosed with prostate cancer at an early age (younger than age 65).
- Age 40 for men at even higher risk (those with more than one first-degree relative who had prostate cancer at an early age).
After this discussion, men who want to be screened should get the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood test.
Click here to learn how to schedule your annual wellness visit with your primary care provider.
Skin cancer is the most common cancers in the United States with 1 in 5 Americans developing skin cancer by the age of 70. With early detection, the 5-year survival rate for skin cancer is 99%.
Screening and Prevention Guidelines:
- Routine total body examination by your primary care physician or dermatologist.
- Report any unusual moles or changes in your skin to your doctor and discuss if you are at increased risk for skin cancer.
- Using sunscreen and avoiding sun exposure when possible is proven to significantly decrease risk of skin cancer.
Click here to learn how to schedule your annual wellness visit with your primary care provider.
Support the Crucial Catch Fund
Join us in donating to the Crucial Catch Fund to support cancer research, screenings, and programs.
Consider a donation to support your community.
Make a donation
Cancer Care at Kettering Health
Kettering Health focuses on holistic cancer care that treats the whole person: mind, body, and spirit.
We provide personalized care when and where you need it. Our dedicated and experienced cancer specialists walk with you through every step of your care.
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