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Prevention & Screening - Colorectal Cancer

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				   ReadPlease Click here for more information about The Cover Your Butt CampaignAll men and women over the age of 50 should talk to their healthcare provider about colorectal cancer screening. This disease is 90 per cent curable if found early.

 

To screen for colorectal cancer, your healthcare provider may suggest you complete a Fecal Occult Blood Test (FOBT) kit at home. Here you collect very small samples of stool and return the kit to your healthcare provider, who will send it in for testing. If the test result is negative, then it did not detect any problems. If the test result is positive, your healthcare provider may order further tests, such as a colonoscopy, to search for pre-cancerous polyps (growths) inside the colon.

 

Risk factors for colorectal cancer include:
 
  • Being 50 years of age or older
  • Having colorectal polyps, ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease
  • Having a family history of colorectal cancer
  • Tobacco use

 

Warning signs:

Colorectal cancer usually has no symptoms in its early stages, when the disease is most treatable, which is why regular screening is important. Symptoms of colorectal cancer can include:
 
  • Rectal bleeding
  • Blood in the stool
  • Change in bowel habits
  • Alternating diarrhea and constipation
  • Persistent abdominal bloating, feelings of fullness, and cramps

 

Information for Patients: Direct Referral to Screening Colonoscopy

 

New Colorectal Cancer Screening Program

 

Colon Cancer CheckThe Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, in collaboration with Cancer Care Ontario, recently launched a province-wide, population-based colorectal cancer screening program – the first of its kind in Canada. The program, ColonCancerCheck, aims to increase screening rates and decrease colorectal cancer-related deaths in Ontario.

 

For more information about colorectal cancer and how to get tested, visit the ColonCancerCheck website.


 

Regional Cancer Care
Northern Cancer Fund