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Health & Medicine for Senior Citizen

Colonoscopy Especially Important for Women but Prep is Harder than for Men

Harvard Women’s Health Watch suggests some ways to make it go more smoothly

Oct. 30, 2008 - Colonoscopy is especially important for women, because they're more likely have polyps or lesions deeper in the colon. Only colonoscopy examines the entire length of of the colon. But there's some reason to believe that bowel prep for a colonoscopy is harder for women than for men, reports the November 2008 issue of Harvard Women's Health Watch.

 

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Read the latest news on Senior Health & Medicine

 

Emptying the contents of the colon - a step called bowel prep - is an essential part of the preparation for a successful colonoscopy. The problem for women is that they are more likely to be constipated, so it may be more difficult to clear the bowel.

Women are also more likely than men to have irritable bowel syndrome, which can cause gas, bloating, and abdominal pain or spasm.

Preparing for a colonoscopy may be uncomfortable and time-consuming, but it needn't be an ordeal. Harvard Women's Health Watch suggests the following to help it go as smoothly and comfortably as possible:

   ● Make sure you receive your colonoscopy prep instructions well before your procedure date, and read them completely as soon as you get them. You'll need to stop certain medications and foods up to a week ahead of time.

   ● Arrange for the time and privacy you need to complete the prep with as little stress as possible. Clear your schedule, and be at home on time to start your prep. Stay as close to the bathroom as possible.

   ● To make a bad-tasting liquid prep easier to swallow, add some Crystal Light or Kool-Aid powder (not red, blue, or purple); drink it chilled; drink it through a straw far back on your tongue; or hold a lemon slice under your nose while you drink the prep.

 

Medicare Archives News Report

 
 

Medicare Colon Cancer Screening Misses Many Minorities, Poor, Less Educated

Older patients also less likely to be screened

Feb. 13, 2007 – The expanded Medicare coverage for colorectal cancer screening has made this critical testing equally available to all senior citizens, but, like is often the case in disease screening, minorities, the poor and the less educated are less likely to be screened. And, somewhat surprising, the study found women less likely to get a colonoscopy. Read more...

 

   ● Water can get boring, so keep a variety of clear liquids on hand to drink before, during, and after your bowel prep.

Also in this issue:

   ● Is Fosamax safe?

   ● Vulvar skin problems

   ● Implants for overactive bladder

Harvard Women's Health Watch is available from Harvard Health Publications, the publishing division of Harvard Medical School, for $24 per year. Subscribe at www.health.harvard.edu/women or by calling 877-649-9457 (toll-free). 

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