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. 2001 May 12;322(7295):1174–1178. doi: 10.1136/bmj.322.7295.1174

Table 1.

Criteria for assessment of screening

Wilson and Jungner Crossroads 99*
Knowledge of disease Knowledge of population and disease
Condition must be important problem Burden of target disease should be important
Target population or population at risk identifiable
Recognisable latent or early symptomatic stage Considerable level of risk or latent or preclinical phase
Natural course of condition, including development from latent to declared disease, should be adequately understood Natural course (from susceptibility to precursor, early disease, and advanced disease) should be adequately understood
Knowledge of test Feasibility of screening procedures
Suitable test or examination Suitable test or examination
Test acceptable to population Entire screening procedure acceptable to population
Case finding should be continuing process and not “once and for all” project Screening should be continuing process and encompass all elements of screening procedures
Treatment for disease Interventions and follow up
Accepted treatment for patients with recognised disease Interventions that have physical, psychological, and social net benefit available
Facilities for diagnosis and treatment available Facilities for adequate surveillance, prevention, treatment, education, counselling, and social support available
Agreed on policy concerning whom to treat as patients Consensus on accepted management for those with positive test results
Cost considerations Societal and health system issues
Costs of case finding (including diagnosis and treatment of patients diagnosed) economically balanced in relation to possible expenditures on medical care as whole Costs should be balanced in economic, psychological, social, and medical terms and with healthcare expenditures as whole
Appropriate screening services accessible to entire population without adverse consequences for non-participants
Appropriate confidentiality procedures and antidiscrimination provisions for participants and non-participants
*

Ethical, legal, and sociobehavioural issues are considered across all domains. Screening should be considered within framework that recognises fundamental human rights.