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Can older women be motivated to attend for their final Papanicolaou tests? The use of targeted and general personalised reminder letters
Authors:Robyn M Mullins
Institution:1. Department of Intensive Care, Austin Health, Intensive Care Unit, Heidelberg, Australia;2. Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, The Alfred Center, Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia;3. Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Australia;4. Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society—Centre for Outcomes and Resource Evaluation (ANZICS-CORE), Carlton, Victoria, Australia;5. Department of Surgical Sciences, Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
Abstract:Background: Australian guidelines allow women to cease having Papanicolaou (Pap) tests at the age of 70, providing they have had two negative smears in the previous 5 years. In Victoria, a standard reminder letter system is in place and women receive one reminder letter 27 months after their last Pap test. Methods: A targeted letter informed by qualitative research was developed to specifically encourage older women to have a final Pap test. The Victorian Cervical Cytology Registry (VCCR) was used to identify 15,000 women aged 65–69 who had not had a Pap test for at least 3 years and up to 17 years. Women were randomly allocated to receive either no letter (control group), the targeted letter or a personally addressed general reminder letter. Results: At 11 weeks follow-up, 4.3% of women (CI 3.7–4.8%) who received the targeted letter had attended for a Pap test compared with 4.7% (CI 4.1–5.3%) of those receiving the general letter and 1.6% (CI 1.2–1.9%) of the control group. Effectiveness was limited to women whose test was no more than 10 years overdue, and was particularly strong for those whose test was 3–5 years overdue. Conclusions: This suggests that a reminder letter was effective, but that targeting the information in the letter did not further improve screening attendance. A second reminder letter sent to women before their Pap test is more than 5 years overdue has potential for increasing the number of women attending for screening.
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