Don’t misinterpret the USPSTF recommendation
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The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force neither supports nor rejects screening asymptomatic adults for obstructive sleep apnea in the primary-care setting, because the current evidence is inadequate to assess the benefits and harms of doing so, according to a Recommendation Statement published online Jan. 23 in JAMA.

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This recommendation must not be misinterpreted. If clinicians are discouraged from directly questioning patients about apnea signs and symptoms or from using short screening questionnaires to identify those at high risk for the disorder, it would negatively influence public health.

Dr. Susan Redline
Primary care clinicians have an important role in mitigating the adverse health consequences of obstructive sleep apnea, which can stem from years of unrecognized disease.
 

Susan Redline, MD, is at the Sleep Health Institute and in the Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, all in Boston. She reported ties to Jazz Pharmaceuticals, RosMed Inc., and the Beckman Company, as well as serving on the American Academy of Sleep Medicine’s board of directors. Dr. Redline made these remarks in an editorial accompanying the USPSTF reports (JAMA 2017;317:368-70).

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This recommendation must not be misinterpreted. If clinicians are discouraged from directly questioning patients about apnea signs and symptoms or from using short screening questionnaires to identify those at high risk for the disorder, it would negatively influence public health.

Dr. Susan Redline
Primary care clinicians have an important role in mitigating the adverse health consequences of obstructive sleep apnea, which can stem from years of unrecognized disease.
 

Susan Redline, MD, is at the Sleep Health Institute and in the Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, all in Boston. She reported ties to Jazz Pharmaceuticals, RosMed Inc., and the Beckman Company, as well as serving on the American Academy of Sleep Medicine’s board of directors. Dr. Redline made these remarks in an editorial accompanying the USPSTF reports (JAMA 2017;317:368-70).

Body

 

This recommendation must not be misinterpreted. If clinicians are discouraged from directly questioning patients about apnea signs and symptoms or from using short screening questionnaires to identify those at high risk for the disorder, it would negatively influence public health.

Dr. Susan Redline
Primary care clinicians have an important role in mitigating the adverse health consequences of obstructive sleep apnea, which can stem from years of unrecognized disease.
 

Susan Redline, MD, is at the Sleep Health Institute and in the Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, all in Boston. She reported ties to Jazz Pharmaceuticals, RosMed Inc., and the Beckman Company, as well as serving on the American Academy of Sleep Medicine’s board of directors. Dr. Redline made these remarks in an editorial accompanying the USPSTF reports (JAMA 2017;317:368-70).

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Don’t misinterpret the USPSTF recommendation
Don’t misinterpret the USPSTF recommendation

 

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force neither supports nor rejects screening asymptomatic adults for obstructive sleep apnea in the primary-care setting, because the current evidence is inadequate to assess the benefits and harms of doing so, according to a Recommendation Statement published online Jan. 23 in JAMA.

 

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force neither supports nor rejects screening asymptomatic adults for obstructive sleep apnea in the primary-care setting, because the current evidence is inadequate to assess the benefits and harms of doing so, according to a Recommendation Statement published online Jan. 23 in JAMA.

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