Updated preventive health recommendations a win for women nationwide

Health Care
Center for Women's Health
Center for Women's Health
Center for Women's Health
Health care providers at the OHSU Center for Women's Health offer the spectrum of preventive care services.(OHSU/Fritz Liedtke)

Physicians in the Pacific Northwest Evidence-based Practice Center at OHSU in Portland, Oregon, played a critical role in updating recommendations for the Women’s Preventive Services Guidelines. The updates, drafted by the Women’s Preventive Services Initiative, a national coalition convened by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, were adopted the by U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Health Resources & Services Administration for coverage under the Affordable Care Act.

The updated recommendations address unique health issues women face, covering topics from screening pregnant women for gestational diabetes to providing education and risk assessment for HIV in adolescent and adult women. 

Heidi D. Nelson, M.D., M.P.H.
Heidi D. Nelson, M.D., M.P.H. (OHSU)

Heidi D. Nelson, M.D., M.P.H., research professor of medicine, and medical informatics and clinical epidemiology in the OHSU School of Medicine, served as principal investigator for the evidence reviews, funded by HRSA. She was a member of the Institute of Medicine (now the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine) panel that convened in 2011 to develop the initial recommendations. She and co-investigators in the Pacific Northwest EPC, including co-investigators Amy Cantor M.D., M.P.H., and Bernadette Zakher M.B.B.S., evaluated current research on the effectiveness of nine prevention services. These evaluations served as the basis for the evidence-based recommendations.

"Good medicine is based on good science, especially when it comes to preventive services. We don’t want to recommend services to millions of healthy women unless we know they are scientifically proven to prevent illness or disease,” says Nelson. “What’s important about these updated recommendations is the services are more clearly defined, and we were able to put a finer point on how providers can standardize implementation of the services and how women can access them. We were also able to dive deeper into the available science which has only gotten stronger over the past 5 years."

The recommended screening services, now covered at no cost under the Affordable Care Act for an estimated 57 million women, include:

“I am happy to see this ground-breaking work come to fruition with OHSU playing a key role,” says Michelle Berlin, M.D., M.P.H., co-director of the OHSU Center for Women’s Health; professor of obstetrics and gynecology, OHSU School of Medicine; and professor of public health and preventive medicine, OHSU-PSU School of Public Health. “These recommendations for women’s health care cover the spectrum of preventive services to ensure a holistic approach to women’s health. They also reinforce the importance of women having a primary care provider who understands the unique health care needs of women and tailors their care.”

The Pacific Northwest EPC, founded in 1997, is a collaboration of OHSU, the University of Washington CHASE Alliance in Seattle, Washington, and Spectrum Research, Inc. in Tacoma, Washington, that conducts systematic reviews on a variety of health care topics for federal and state agencies, professional associations and foundations. The Pacific Northwest EPC reports the evidence from clinical research studies and the quality of that evidence for use by clinicians, employers, policymakers, researchers and others in making decisions about the provision of health care services and health research. The Pacific Northwest EPC is funded in part by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and directed by Roger Chou, M.D., a professor of medicine (general internal medicine and geriatrics), and medical informatics and clinical epidemiology in the OHSU School of Medicine.


OHSU Communications
503 494-8231