Low-dose CT eligibility
Adults who currently smoke or who quit within the last 15 years and who meet pack-year thresholds are the group most often discussing screening.
Lung-screening planning is easier when eligibility, smoking history, and the right next visit are explained clearly.
Adults who currently smoke or who quit within the last 15 years and who meet pack-year thresholds are the group most often discussing screening.
The pack-year history is not a detail. It is the heart of the eligibility conversation.
Routine screening and symptom-driven evaluation are different clinical problems and should not be mixed together on the page.
Lung cancer screening works best with a local clinician review that explains whether screening is appropriate and what the next step looks like.
Lung cancer screening for eligible adults is usually about low-dose CT rather than generic chest imaging. The clearest explanation makes that explicit instead of leaving it vague.
A symptom such as chest pain, coughing up blood, or significant shortness of breath is not the same as a routine screening question. The page needs to distinguish those clearly.
Nao can help patients review smoking history, age, and eligibility, then guide the next step when low-dose CT screening or related follow-up makes sense.
The visit should make it easy to review eligibility and understand what to do next in New York.
These existing pages connect lung-screening questions to real Nao care options.
Primary care is the main entry point for low-dose CT eligibility review and smoking-history-based screening conversations.
Use the broader hub to compare lung screening with colorectal, PSA, Galleri, and cervical-screening questions.
This screening route belongs in preventive primary care before outside imaging is coordinated.
These are the questions most likely to decide whether someone is even in the right screening conversation yet.
These pages cover the other screening conversations patients often ask about while thinking through low-dose CT eligibility.
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.
Compare stool-based screening and colonoscopy options with clear next-step guidance.
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.
Lung-screening pages work when they clarify eligibility, separate symptoms from routine screening, and point to a real local booking path.