Sunday, 1 February 2026

Screen early for cancer

A Gippsland Primary Health Network study has revealed Gippsland has some of Australia's highest rates of avoidable deaths due to cancer, including breast cancer and colorectal cancer. The statistics were released in a cancer snapshot that revealed...

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by The Gazette
Screen early for cancer

A Gippsland Primary Health Network study has revealed Gippsland has some of Australia's highest rates of avoidable deaths due to cancer, including breast cancer and colorectal cancer.
The statistics were released in a cancer snapshot that revealed avoidable cancer death rates (average per 100,000 people) in Gippsland were at 35.9 per cent, significantly
higher than Victoria at 28.2 per cent and Australia at 28.8.
In cancer screening, the results were mixed. The snapshot shows in Gippsland:
47.3 per cent of people aged 50-74 years participated in the National Bowel Cancer Screening Program (Victoria 43.9 per cent)
51.8 per cent of women aged 50-74 years screened for breast cancer (Victoria 45.9 per cent)
56.4 per cent of women 25-74 years screened for cervical cancer (Victoria 62.2 per cent)
National Bowel Cancer Screening Program data shows that participants who identified as being of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander origin, those who lived in very remote areas and those who lived in low socioeconomic areas all had higher rates of positive screens. They also had lower rates of follow-up diagnostic assessment and a longer median time between a positive screen and assessment.
Gippsland PHN acting chief executive officer Angela Jacob said it was important to raise awareness of the importance of screening for cancer.
"We are working closely with general practitioners as we know they are central to increasing cancer screening participation rates," Mrs Jacob said. "Tragically, with one-in-two people being affected by cancer in their lifetimes, we will all be touched by disease.''
"Finding cancer at an early stage increases the chances of successful treatment and improved survival. I encourage everyone to talk about screening to their trusted GP or nurse."

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