Guide to Clinical Preventive Services, 3rd Edition: Periodic Updates
By Alfred O. Berg, M.D., M.P.H.,a and Janet D. Allan, Ph.D., R.N., C.S.b
Address correspondence to: Chair, U.S. Preventive Services Task Force; c/o Project Director, USPSTF, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ); 540 Gaither Road; Rockville, MD 20850.
New recommendations from the U.S. Preventive
Services Task Force (USPSTF) are now being
released periodically in looseleaf format. Unlike the
first and second editions of the Guide to Clinical
Preventive Services, which were compiled only after
the USPSTF had completed all of its
recommendations, the third edition will be released
incrementally to update several topics at a time as
recommendations are completed.
When the current
USPSTF has completed all of its recommendations,
the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
(AHRQ) plans to print them in a single, bound
volume. Current and previous USPSTF
recommendations, along with tables listing
USPSTF-recommended preventive services, can also
be found on the USPSTF Web site
(http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/uspstfix.htm).
The USPSTF is in the midst of an ongoing and
rigorous process of reviewing the evidence of
effectiveness of a broad array of clinical preventive
services—screening, counseling, and
chemoprevention—updating many of its previous
recommendations and releasing other
recommendations for the first time. This first
printing of the Guide to Clinical Preventive Services,
Third Edition: Periodic Updates compiles for
subscribers background information, summaries of
the supporting evidence, and recommendations that
were first published in American Family Physician,
American Journal of Preventive Medicine, Annals of
Internal Medicine, and released on the AHRQ Web
site (http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/uspstfix.htm). Recommendations and evidence summaries to be mailed to subscribers in 2002 focus
on topics such as depression screening, colorectal
cancer screening, hormone replacement therapy,
breast cancer screening, breast cancer
chemoprevention, screening for osteoporosis, and
counseling to promote physical activity, among
others.
AHRQ convened the current USPSTF, an
independent panel of private sector experts in
primary care and prevention, in late 1998. The
systematic evidence reviews that support the
recommendations of the current Task Force are
conducted by two AHRQ-supported Evidence-based
Practice Centers (EPCs), one at Oregon Health &
Science University and the other at Research
Triangle Institute-University of North Carolina.
In preparing the reviews, the EPCs conduct a
comprehensive analysis of the research literature
using state-of-the art standards of evidence, and
solicit the input of a broad array of Federal and
private reviewers. The USPSTF uses the reviews and
comments, but guards its independence by
separating the review of evidence from crafting
recommendations. Final recommendations are
based on the quality of the evidence and the relative
balance of benefits and harms. Members of the
current USPSTF represent the fields of family
medicine, pediatrics, internal medicine, obstetrics
and gynecology, geriatrics, preventive medicine,
public health, behavioral medicine, and nursing.
USPSTF recommendations have formed the basis
of the clinical standards for many professional
societies, health care organizations, and medical
quality review groups. Previous editions of the Guide
to Clinical Preventive Services have been used widely
in undergraduate and post-graduate medical and
nursing education as a key reference for teaching
preventive care. The work of the USPSTF has
helped establish the importance of including
prevention in primary health care, ensuring
insurance coverage for effective preventive services,
and holding providers and health care systems
accountable for delivering effective care. USPSTF
recommendations highlight the opportunities for
improving delivery of effective services and have
helped others in narrowing gaps in the provision of
preventive care in different populations.
The Guide to Clinical Preventive Services,
Third Edition: Periodic Updates is online at the USPSTF
Web site at http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/cps3dix.htm.
aAlfred O. Berg, M.D. (Chair)
Professor and Chair
Department of Family Medicine
University of Washington, Seattle, WA
bJanet D. Allan, Ph.D., R.N., C.S., F.A.A.N. (Vice-Chair)
Dean and Professor
School of Nursing
University of Texas Health Science Center
San Antonio, TX
Current as of October 2002
Internet Citation:
Preface: Guide to Clinical Preventive Services, 3rd Edition: Periodic Updates. U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. October 2002. http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/3rduspstf/preface.htm