Find clinic locations for Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics and services in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
Find services offered by Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
We encourage you, our patient, concerned family member, or area employer to review Fort HealthCare’s information
We coordinate community education and health-related events and screenings for the Fort HealthCare service area.
Screening tests and health counseling are a key part of managing your health. A screening test is done to find disorders or diseases in people who don't have any symptoms. Screening tests are not used to diagnose. They are used to find out if more testing is needed. The goal may be to find a disease early so it can be treated with more success. Or the goal may be to find a disease early so you can make lifestyle changes. You may need regular checkups to help reduce your risk of disease.
Below are guidelines for women ages 65 and older. Talk with your healthcare provider. Based on your health history and risk factors, your provider may change the screening advice. Make sure you’re up-to-date on what you need.
Screening
Who needs it
How often
Type 2 diabetes or prediabetes
Women in this age group up to age 70 who are overweight or have obesity
Talk with your healthcare provider about how often they recommend screening.
Type 2 diabetes
All women with prediabetes
Every 1 to 2 years
Unhealthy alcohol use
All women in this age group
At routine exams
Blood pressure
Once a year if your blood pressure is normal. Normal blood pressure is less than 120/80 mm Hg. If your blood pressure is higher than this, follow the advice of your healthcare provider.
Breast cancer
All women of average risk. Expert groups vary on their advice. Talk with your provider about your specific situation.
A mammogram should be done every 1 or 2 years. Talk with your provider about your risk factors. Ask how often you need the test. Ask what age you can stop. The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force advises a mammogram every 2 years through age 74. The American Cancer Society advises screening every 1 to 2 years for women 55 and older. They advise screening to continue for as long as a woman is healthy and is expected to live 10 more years or longer.
All women should know how their breasts normally look and feel. They should know the benefits and risks of breast cancer screening with mammograms.
Cervical cancer
Only women who have not been screened regularly or have had abnormal screening results before age 65
Talk with your healthcare provider if screening is needed.
Chlamydia
Women at higher risk for infection
At routine exams. Talk with your healthcare provider.
Colorectal cancer
All women at average risk in this age group through age 75. For women ages 76 to 85, ask your healthcare provider if you need to keep screening. For women older than 85, screening is not advised
Talk with your healthcare provider about which test below is right for you:
Colonoscopy every 10 years
Flexible sigmoidoscopy every 5 years (or every 10 years with yearly fecal immunochemical test (FIT) stool test)
CT colonography (virtual colonoscopy) every 5 years
Yearly fecal occult blood test
Yearly FIT
Stool DNA test every 3 years
If you have a test that is not a colonoscopy and have an abnormal test result, you will need a colonoscopy.
You may need to be screened more or less often. This is based on personal or family health history. Talk with your healthcare provider.
Depression
Gonorrhea
Sexually active women at higher risk for infection
At yearly routine exams. Talk with your healthcare provider.
Hepatitis C
Test 1 time for women through age 79.
High cholesterol or triglycerides
All women in this age group who are at risk for coronary artery disease
Every year. Talk with your healthcare provider about your risk.
HIV
Lung cancer
Women ages 50 to 80 who are in fairly good health, are at higher risk for lung cancer, and who:
Smoke or have quit smoking and
Have a 20-pack per year smoking history (1 pack a day for 20 years or 2 packs a day for 10 years)
Expert groups vary in their advice. Talk with your provider.
Yearly lung cancer screening with a low dose CT scan (LDCT). Talk with your healthcare provider about your risk factors.
Obesity
At yearly routine exams
Osteoporosis
Routinely done every 2 years. Repeat as advised by your healthcare provider.
Syphilis
Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone (TSH)
Women in this age group with symptoms of thyroid dysfunction
Talk with your healthcare provider
Tuberculosis
Vision
Every 1 to 2 years. If you have a chronic health condition, ask your eye care provider if you need exams more often.
Counseling
Diet and exercise
Women who are overweight or obese
When diagnosed, and then at routine exams
Fall prevention (exercise and vitamin D supplements)
Sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention
Use of tobacco and the health effects it can cause
Every exam