Home News Weather Finance Travel Maps Movies Lottery Horoscopes Games
 SECTION: DISEASE, MEDICINE, AIDS, HEALTH CARE RESEARCH
Search The Web:
DOMAIN NAMES
AS LOW AS $2.99 / YR.
Women Given Wrong Breast Cancer Results
Friday, 28-Jan-2011 9:34PM United Press International
USTINET NEWS

 » Front Page

 » Top Stories

 » U.S.

 » World

 » Politics

 » Business

 » Sports

 » Health

 » Tech/Science

    Aerospace & NASA

    Computers

    Electronics

    Environment

    Nuclear

    Science

    Telecomm

 » Living/Entertainment

 » Off Beat Stories

 » News Photos

 » Weather


Special Editions

 » Iraq & Conflict

 » Israel/Palestine

 » Crimes & Laws


MultiMedia

 » Interactive Features

 » News Photos


POLL: Your Opinion

 » What Do You Think




SYDNEY, Jan. 28 (UPI) -- Two Australian women have found they have breast cancer, after a computer error had wrongly cleared them of the disease, healthcare industry officials said.

SAVE MONEY ON TRAVEL DEALS

BreastScreen Victoria was forced to re-examine the mammograms of about 5,000 women in November, following a computer error that assigned some images to the wrong women. In two cases women were found to have new cases of cancer.

BreastScreen Victoria Chief Executive Officer Vicki Pridmore told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. she is confident such errors would not happen again.

"We've put in place safeguards at the point in time of discovering the issue and we've had no further incidents", she said. "What I can say is that the decision we took to re-read the mammograms has resulted in early detection of cancer."

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Related News Topics:

Women's issues
Top science, technical and computer stories
News of Australia
Disease, medicine, health care research
Social issues
News of Asia and Oceania
Miscellaneous science and technology stories
Disease, medicine, aids, health care research

 BREAKING STORIES

Why broccoli may prevent cancer

Women given wrong breast cancer results

Loud traffic noise linked to stroke risk

Cleanliness of girls may up asthma risk

Interim guidance for drugs to prevent HIV

Lura Ryan's condition 'very grave'

Unrealistic optimism may taint trials

Food-borne bacteria can fatally hit heart

Caffeine 'jazzes' engineered cells

Teens should get meningococcal booster

U.N. warns of Asian foot-and-mouth threat

World-wide debate over smallpox virus

Waitress fired for bald cancer support

Repeal of gay blood-donor ban sought

Diabetics, spouses may feel stress

Exercise improves street-crossing speed

Hair stylists question chemical in relaxer

Hot flashes linked to fewer breast cancers

Rhabdomyolysis cited in Iowa hospitalizations

Meningitis confirmed in 2 Fla. prisoners

Home News Weather Finance Travel Maps Movies Lottery Horoscopes Games
Home :: My Page :: My WebMail :: My Calendar :: My Portfolio :: Chat :: Help Center :: Sign In :: Sign Out

MY.USTI.NET PORTAL  -  © 1996 - 2004 USTINET CORPORATION. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Please see our Privacy Policy, Security Guarantee, Terms of Use for additional information.