Geisinger Health Plan will not change any of the policies regarding mammograms and will continue to urge health plan members to undergo the procedure at age 40.
“The previous guidelines state 40 to 50 (years of age),” Amy Bowen, a spokeswoman for GHP, said Wednesday. “Our coverage covers a mammogram for anyone of any age. We will continue to provide mammograms for all ages.”
According to the Associated Press, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force said most women don’t need mammograms in their 40s and should get one every two years starting at 50. For every 1,000 women screened, beginning at 40, the model suggested 0.7 deaths would be prevented, while 480 women would get a false positive result and 33 more would have unneeded biopsies.
Dr. John Turner, medical director at the Thyra M. Humphreys Center for Breast Health at Evangelical Community Hospital, Lewisburg, said Wednesday that when he heard the initial report, he felt defeated.
“Defeated and foolish,” he said, adding it was like the report said women were wasting their time in attempting to battle the disease. “I think women are too smart to (wait), though,” he said.
Pennsylvania law requires insurance agencies to provide mammograms to women 40 and older, and some have speculated that insurance agencies worried about costs are behind the new report. Bowen said that’s not the case for the Danville-based Geisinger Health Plan.
“We encourage members to get them,” she said. “If we are making reminders that they need to get one, we will go one step further and schedule the appointment for them if they want us to.”
So far this year, more than 17,000 mammograms have been covered for patients of the plan.
News
GHP won't change policy on mammograms
- News
-
-
Warden demotes four bosses
Northumberland County Prison Warden Roy Johnson was able to trim about $135,000 in expenses by demoting four supervisors.
-
DJ pumps up audience
Every Tuesday evening, Richard Grogg can be found spinning tunes at possibly the most well-attended dance in Snyder County.
-
Agency closes adult center
Union and Snyder County caregivers have had to look farther and wider for another program that can offer respite because the Agency on Aging can no longer afford to provide the service.
-
New Berlin pushes to acquire school
The Borough Council sold the property where the New Berlin Elementary School is to the precursor of the Mifflinburg Area School District for $1 back in 1950. It was deeded to the district for construction of a school.
-
Second suit filed to stop sewer merger
It must have seemed like deja vu all over again Wednesday for some members of the Northumberland Sewer Authority, when for the second time in two weeks, former NSA Chairman Adam Klock filed a civil action against former board colleagues Jack Fasold, James Orner and Donald Troxell, alleging they held an illegal meeting -- this time on Monday -- where they voted to transfer the borough authority's assets to the merged North-Point Sewer Authority.
- Ex-judge, 3 others die in Fla.
-
NetHead
NetSummary
-
School grants in works
MILTON -- How school funds will be distributed through Gov. Tom Corbett's proposed block grant program, which combines four basic education budget lines, still needs to be worked out, the governor said at a press conference Wednesday.
-
Corbett: Low taxes help generate jobs
MILTON -- With a backdrop of Minuteman Environmental Services trucks and charts depicting state spending, Gov. Tom Corbett said Wednesday that his proposed fiscal 2012-13 budget is a realistic plan that will help create jobs while holding the line on spending.
-
Viking Energy to close April 1
NORTHUMBERLAND -- Unable to compete with the natural gas industry, the Viking Energy plant in Point Township will close April 1 and put 19 employees out of work.
-
Getting caffeine fix as easy as taking deep breath
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Move over, coffee and Red Bull. A Harvard professor thinks the next big thing will be people inhaling their caffeine from a lipstick-sized tube. Critics say the novel product is not without its risks.
-
Jerry Sandusky argues for local jurors, suggests delay
HARRISBURG — Jerry Sandusky wants jurors in his child sex-abuse trial to be chosen from the community where he lives and is suggesting a trial delay may be the best way to address the intense publicity generated by the case.
- More News Headlines
-
Warden demotes four bosses







