About breast screening
The NHS Breast Screening Programme began in 1988. It aims to invite all women aged from 50 until aged 71 years, for breast screening once every three years. Nationally the programme screens over 2 million women each year and diagnoses about 16,500 breast cancers annually.
The screening programme also offers women aged 71 and over a free breast screen every three years. If you are 71 or over you may not be sent an invitation but are encouraged to call the unit to make an appointment that suits you.
The aim of breast screening is to detect breast cancer at an earlier stage, often before the woman is aware of any problem. Early detection may mean simpler and more successful treatment. Scientific evidence shows that regular breast screening, between the ages of 50 until aged 71 years, reduces the death rate from breast cancer. See the
NHS Breast Screening Programme for more details.
To enable women to be screened closer to home, breast screening is carried out at a number of sites across the region.
The NHS Breast Screening Programme is subject to monitoring by the
Quality Assurance Reference Centre (SQAS). It ensures rigorous quality assurance standards are maintained.