Screening and Selection: The Case of Mammograms
Liran Einav, Amy Finkelstein, Tamar Oostrom, Abigail Ostriker, Heidi Williams
Abstract
We analyze selection into screening in the context of recommendations that breast cancer screening start at age 40. Combining medical claims with a clinical oncology model, we document that compliers with the recommendation are less likely to have cancer than younger women who select into screening or women who never screen. We show this selection is quantitatively important: shifting the recommendation from age 40 to 45 results in three times as many deaths if compliers were randomly selected than under the estimated patterns of selection. The results highlight the importance of considering characteristics of compliers when making and designing recommendations.
Topics & Concepts
Selection (genetic algorithm)Context (archaeology)Breast cancerMedicineBreast cancer screeningCancerCase selectionComputer scienceFamily medicineMedical physicsArtificial intelligenceInternal medicineMammographySurgeryGeographyArchaeologyGlobal Cancer Incidence and ScreeningColorectal Cancer Screening and DetectionCancer Risks and Factors