Women's Health Check Women's Health Check offers free breast and cervical cancer screening to women who qualify. Exams are available from more than 250 qualified Idaho providers including district health departments, clinics, tribal health facilities,gynecologists, and family practice doctors.
To see if you qualify contact Women's Health Check at (208) 239-5290, or call the Idaho Careline by dialing 211.
Enrollment is simple. Contact a Women’s Health Check enrollment center for information.
Recognizing the value of screening and early detection, Congress passed the Breast and Cervical Cancer Mortality Prevention Act of 1990, which established the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program (NBCCEDP). The NBCCEDP provides screening services, including clinical breast examinations, mammograms, pelvic examinations, and Pap test to underserved women. The NBCCEDP also funds post-screening diagnostic and case management services.
Idaho’s Women’s Health Check (WHC) program was federally funded in October 1996 for comprehensive screening through a Cooperative Agreement with the NBCCEDP. By spring 1997, the program was launched locally, with three Health Districts piloting the program. WHC now has contracted to coordinate screening and diagnostic services for eligible Women’s Health Check partners to provide breast and cervical cancer education and outreach opportunities, and clinical breast exam training for health care professionals.
| Persons in Family Unit | Annual | Monthly Income |
|---|---|---|
| For each additional person, add $7,640(annual) $637(monthly) | ||
| 1 | $21,780 | $1,815 |
| 2 | $29,420 | $2,452 |
| 3 | $37,060 | $3,088 |
| 4 | $44,700 | $3,725 |
| 5 | $52,340 | $4,362 |
| 6 | $59,980 | $4,998 |
| 7 | $67,620 | $5,635 |
| 8 | $75,260 | $6,272 |
Women’s Health Check provides regular cancer screenings for qualifying women - because once is not enough.
Most mammograms and Pap tests are normal. However, any problems found are much easier to cure when discovered early.
Changes in the cervix can be found even before cancer develops. That’s why it is important not to wait to be tested.