Cologuard for average-risk adults
Cologuard is typically discussed for average-risk adults 45 and older who want a non-invasive at-home screening option and who do not already need colonoscopy now.
Most patients do not need more generic colon-cancer awareness copy. They need a cleaner explanation of when stool testing is reasonable and when colonoscopy should move to the front of the conversation.
Cologuard is typically discussed for average-risk adults 45 and older who want a non-invasive at-home screening option and who do not already need colonoscopy now.
Symptoms, prior polyps, family history, inflammatory bowel disease, or a positive stool test can all push colonoscopy higher in the decision tree.
The most important patient question after a positive stool-based result is what happens next and how quickly that follow-up needs to move.
The answer is rarely just preference. Risk level, symptoms, and screening history all matter.
Cologuard is usually a conversation for average-risk adults who want an at-home stool-DNA screening option and who are still in the stage of deciding how to start screening.
Colonoscopy becomes a much stronger next step when a patient has symptoms, a significant family history, prior polyps, certain high-risk conditions, or a positive stool-based result.
The visit can help determine whether a patient is still in the average-risk screening phase or already in a category where colonoscopy should be taken more seriously now.
A positive stool-based result is not a diagnosis by itself. It is a sign the screening path has changed and the next conversation usually needs to happen around colonoscopy follow-up.
Use the live Cologuard page for the direct at-home route and primary care for broader screening planning or follow-up questions.
Use this page if you already know you want the Nao Cologuard screening path.
Primary care is the right home for broader screening conversations, risk review, and next-step planning when the answer is not obvious.
The broader hub ties colorectal screening into PSA, Pap smears, Galleri, and lung-screening decisions instead of isolating it.
These are the colorectal-screening questions that most directly affect the first decision and the follow-up path.
These supporting pages cover the adjacent screening decisions patients often compare alongside colorectal screening.
Start with the main cancer-screening page for colorectal, Galleri, cervical, PSA, and lung-screening planning across the Nao network.
Use the Cologuard page for direct at-home colorectal-screening booking and follow-up planning.
Review multi-cancer early-detection planning, who may consider Galleri, and what it does not replace.
Use the cervical-screening page for Pap smear questions, HPV co-testing context, and local women's-health clinic access.
Handle prostate-screening timing, shared-decision questions, and PSA blood-test planning through primary care.
Check low-dose CT eligibility, smoking-history thresholds, and how screening conversations can start locally.
The most useful colorectal page is the one that helps patients stop stalling and get onto the right screening path now.