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GP Clinic · Iluka WA 6028
Ages 30–39 – Establishing baselines and catching early risk factors
Your 30s are the ideal decade to establish health baselines and start targeted screenings before risk factors accelerate. The evidence-based approach is not a comprehensive annual physical — it is focused, purposeful screening where the evidence actually supports it.
Blood pressure is the cornerstone check in your 30s. If normal, every 3–5 years is sufficient — but annual monitoring is needed if readings fall in the elevated range (120–139/80–89 mmHg). BMI and waist circumference should be assessed annually, as central adiposity is a key driver of cardiovascular and metabolic risk.
This is general health information. Consult your GP for personalised preventive care advice.
Our GPs can review your individual risk factors and build a personalised screening plan — no matter your decade.
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| Screening | 30s | 40s | 50s |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blood Pressure | 3–5y | Annual | Annual |
| Cholesterol | — | Regular | Regular |
| Diabetes | Age 35+ | 3 yearly | 3 yearly |
| Bowel Cancer | — | Age 45+ | Strongly rec. |
| Cervical | 5 yearly | 5 yearly | 5 yearly |
| Mammogram | — | Age 40+ | 1–2 yearly |
| Lung CT | — | — | Age 50+ |
| PSA | — | — | Discuss |
| Depression | All adults | All adults | All adults |
Do I need a health check every year?
Not for every test. Most screenings have specific intervals.
When should I start bowel cancer screening?
Earlier if risk factors exist, otherwise around mid-40s.
What blood tests are key in my 40s?
Lipids, fasting glucose, HbA1c, and risk scoring.
Does family history change my schedule?
Yes — screening may start earlier.
Ages 40–49 — New screenings unlock; cardiovascular risk assessment begins
Your 40s represent a genuine inflection point in preventive care. Several important new screenings begin this decade — most notably bowel cancer screening from age 45 and formal cardiovascular risk calculation. Blood pressure moves from every few years to annually.2
New this decade — Cardiovascular Risk Calculation: Your GP will calculate your 10-year ASCVD (atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease) risk for adults aged 40–75. This determines whether cholesterol-lowering therapy (statins) may benefit you — one of the most important preventive decisions of your adult life.4,10
Lipid (cholesterol) screening is now recommended for both men and women aged 40–75.5,4 Diabetes screening expands to all adults aged 40–70 who are overweight or obese.4 For women, breast cancer screening via mammography is recommended from age 40, every 1–2 years.11
Screening Priority — Ages 40–49
Australian context: BreastScreen Australia invites women aged 40 and over for free mammograms every two years. The National Bowel Cancer Screening Program currently posts free FIT kits to eligible Australians aged 50–74 — but starting screening at age 45 is now evidence-supported by international guidelines.
This is general health information. Consult your GP for personalised preventive care advice.
Ages 50–59 — The most preventive services recommended of any decade
The 50–59 age group carries the highest number of recommended preventive services of any adult decade.1 This is when bowel cancer screening earns its strongest evidence rating, lung cancer screening unlocks for eligible smokers, and prostate cancer screening becomes a decision worth having with your GP. This decade rewards those who show up.
New in your 50s — Lung Cancer Screening: Current and former smokers aged 50–80 with a history of 20 or more pack-years are recommended to have annual low-dose CT (LDCT) scans for lung cancer detection.5,12 Pack-years = cigarettes per day ÷ 20 × years smoked.
Bowel cancer screening holds a strong recommendation for ages 50–75 — the highest evidence grade.8,9,15 The FIT (faecal immunochemical test) is non-invasive, available free through Australia's national program, and highly effective at detecting early-stage bowel cancer before symptoms develop.
Complete Screening Menu — Ages 50–59
| Screening | Frequency | Who | Priority |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bowel Cancer (FIT)8,9 | Annually | All adults 50–75 | High |
| Blood Pressure2 | Annually | All adults | High |
| Cholesterol / Lipids5 | As guided by GP | All adults 40–75 | Moderate |
| Mammogram (women)11 | Every 1–2 years | Women | Moderate |
| Cervical Screening11 | Every 5 years | Women to age 65 | Moderate |
| Lung CT (LDCT)5,12 | Annually | Smokers ≥20 pack-years, age 50–80 | Moderate |
| PSA Test (men)5,12 | Discuss with GP | Men aged 55–69 | Shared Decision |
| Diabetes Screening2 | Every 3 years | All adults | Routine |
| AAA Ultrasound5 | One-time (age 65–75) | Male ever-smokers | One-Off |
Prostate cancer PSA testing — a nuanced conversation: Men aged 55–69 should have a shared decision-making discussion with their GP about PSA (prostate-specific antigen) testing.5,12 Benefits include early cancer detection; limitations include false positives and the risk of overdiagnosis and overtreatment. Your GP will help you weigh both sides based on your individual profile.
This is general health information. Consult your GP for personalised preventive care advice.
Why one-size-fits-all doesn't work — and what changes your timeline
Evidence consistently shows that preventive health screening should be risk-based and individually tailored — not uniform for all adults.1 A number of factors can move your screening start dates earlier, increase the frequency of tests, or trigger additional checks your age-matched peers may not require.
Important for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples: The RACGP recommends earlier and more frequent cardiovascular risk assessment — starting opportunistically from age 18–29, with formal CVD risk algorithm application for ages 30–79.14 This highlights Australia's commitment to targeted preventive care for populations at elevated risk. Speak with your GP about a tailored plan.
| Risk Modifier | What Changes | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Family history of bowel cancer | Earlier colonoscopy, increased frequency | High |
| Family history of breast cancer | Earlier mammography, possible genetic testing referral | High |
| Overweight / Obesity (BMI ≥25) | Earlier diabetes and cardiovascular screening | Moderate |
| Smoking history | Earlier CVD risk assessment; lung CT eligibility from age 50 | High |
| Hypertension / Raised cholesterol | More frequent lipid panels, closer BP monitoring | Moderate |
| Aboriginal / Torres Strait Islander background | Earlier CVD & diabetes screening per RACGP guidelines14 | Moderate |
What the evidence does not support: Routine comprehensive physical examinations (beyond BP and BMI) have not demonstrated mortality benefit.1 Annual checks are not warranted for most screenings. Cognitive screening in asymptomatic adults is not recommended. Testicular cancer screening is not recommended. Skin cancer screening has insufficient evidence to support routine asymptomatic checks.15
This is general health information. Consult your GP for personalised preventive care advice.