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πŸ₯ Health Checkup Guide by Age

This guide provides age and gender-specific health checkup recommendations to help with early disease detection and prevention.

This guide is based on South Korea's national health checkup system
01

Importance of Regular Health Checkups

Regular health checkups are the most effective way to detect diseases early and increase treatment success rates. Particularly for conditions common among Koreans such as stomach cancer, colorectal cancer, and lung cancer, early detection can achieve 5-year survival rates exceeding 90%, while late-stage discovery dramatically reduces survival chances. South Korea has one of the world's best health screening systems, enabling all citizens to receive affordable checkups. Checkups not only identify diseases but also provide opportunities to encourage lifestyle improvements. As age increases, disease risk rises, making thorough screening increasingly important after age 40, and those with family history should consult physicians to determine additional screening needs.

02

Understanding National Health Screening

Korea's National Health Screening Program, operated by the National Health Insurance Service, covers both workplace and regional subscribers. General health screenings occur every two years, with office workers eligible biennially and non-office workers annually. Candidates receive annual notifications by mail or text and can use any of about 10,000 designated screening institutions nationwide. General screening includes physical measurements, blood pressure, blood tests, urine tests, and chest X-rays, while cancer screening separately covers stomach (40+), colorectal (50+), liver and lung (high-risk), breast and cervical cancer (women). General screening requires no personal expense and cancer screening only 10%.

03

Detailed Analysis of Age-Specific Screening

Ages 20-30 often suffice with basic health screenings, but women should begin cervical cancer screening every two years from age 20. The 40s mark when disease onset begins, requiring regular gastroscopy, colonoscopy, and abdominal ultrasounds, with women needing mammography every two years. The 50s see dramatically increased cancer incidence, requiring comprehensive screening for stomach, colorectal, lung, and liver cancers, while smokers should receive low-dose chest CT every two years. Ages 60+ require particular attention to cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis. Those with family history should begin screening 5-10 years earlier than recommended ages.

04

Importance of Endoscopic Examinations

Gastroscopy is the most accurate method for early detection of stomach cancer, the most common cancer among Koreans, and enables immediate tissue biopsy when abnormalities are detected. Those aged 40+ should receive gastroscopy every two years, fasting at least 8 hours beforehand. Colonoscopy is the most effective method for detecting colorectal cancer and polyps; removing polyps upon detection prevents cancer. Those aged 50+ should receive colonoscopy every five years, with bowel preparation required beforehand. Endoscopy results are immediately available, with final tissue biopsy results provided 1-2 weeks later.

05

Women-Specific Health Screening Guide

Women require specialized health screenings by life stage. From age 20, cervical cancer screening every two years enables early detection of cancer and precancerous lesions. Women aged 40+ need mammography every two years, with breast cancer achieving over 90% treatment success with early detection. Those with family history or dense breast tissue should consider additional breast ultrasounds. Bone density tests should occur at ages 54 and 66, as post-menopausal women face increased osteoporosis risk preventable through calcium, vitamin D, and exercise. Women planning pregnancy should receive rubella antibody and thyroid function tests in advance.

06

Men-Specific Health Screening Guide

Men face higher incidence of cardiovascular, liver, and lung disease, making regular screening crucial. Men aged 50+ should receive annual prostate cancer screening (PSA), as prostate cancer shows no early symptoms and is detectable only through screening. Smokers need lung cancer screening every two years, and those with 30+ pack-years must receive low-dose chest CT. Men at high liver disease risk need liver cancer screening every six months. For cardiovascular prevention, regularly monitor blood pressure, blood sugar, and cholesterol; those 40+ should receive annual electrocardiograms and consider additional tests like echocardiograms if risk factors exist.

07

Early Detection and Prevention of Lifestyle Diseases

Hypertension, diabetes, and hyperlipidemia are major chronic diseases among Koreans, requiring early detection and management through regular blood tests. These conditions show no early symptoms, making detection possible only through screening, and neglect can trigger serious complications like myocardial infarction and stroke. Normal blood pressure is systolic below 120mmHg and diastolic below 80mmHg. Readings of 140/90mmHg or higher indicate hypertension, requiring medication and lifestyle improvements. Regular home blood pressure monitoring aids management. Fasting blood sugar below 100mg/dL is normal, with 126mg/dL or higher indicating diabetes. HbA1c tests reflect average blood sugar over 2-3 months, providing important diabetes management indicators. Lifestyle improvements during pre-diabetes can prevent diabetes onset. Total cholesterol below 200mg/dL and LDL cholesterol below 130mg/dL are normal. Hyperlipidemia causes fat accumulation in blood vessels leading to atherosclerosis, requiring management through diet, exercise, and medication when necessary. Obesity is a risk factor for all chronic diseases. Normal BMI ranges from 18.5-22.9kg/mΒ², with 25kg/mΒ² or higher classified as obese. Abdominal obesity (men's waist circumference 90cm+, women's 85cm+) is a key metabolic syndrome indicator requiring special attention.

08

Detailed Cancer Screening Information

Stomach cancer screening for those 40 and above involves gastroscopy or upper GI series every two years. With Korea having the world's highest stomach cancer incidence, regular screening is crucial. Helicobacter pylori eradication treatment helps prevent stomach cancer. Colorectal cancer screening for those 50 and above includes annual fecal occult blood tests, with positive results requiring colonoscopy. Alternatively, direct colonoscopy every 5-10 years is possible. Those with family history should begin screening at age 40. Liver cancer screening targets those 40 and above with cirrhosis, hepatitis B, or hepatitis C, involving liver ultrasounds and serum alpha-fetoprotein tests every six months. As hepatitis B is a major liver cancer cause, preventing hepatitis B through vaccination is important. Lung cancer screening targets high-risk individuals aged 54-74 (30+ pack-year smoking history) with low-dose chest CT every two years. While lung cancer has low survival rates due to difficult early detection, low-dose CT dramatically improves treatment success rates through early detection. Breast cancer screening for women 40 and above involves mammography every two years. Those with dense breasts or family history can add breast ultrasound or breast MRI. Cervical cancer screening for women 20 and above includes PAP smears every two years.

09

Health Checkup Preparation and Precautions

Adequate preparation before health checkups is necessary. Fasting from 9 PM the evening before screening is required, with minimal water consumption preferred. Fasting is essential for accurate blood sugar and blood pressure test results. On checkup day morning, avoid water, beverages, food, cigarettes, and gum. Essential medications like blood pressure and heart medications can be taken with minimal water, but must be decided after physician consultation. Diabetes medications and insulin are taken with meals after screening. Women should schedule checkups avoiding menstrual periods, as urine tests and cervical cancer screening accuracy may decrease. Those possibly pregnant should notify staff to avoid X-ray exposure. Checkup results typically arrive 1-2 weeks later via mail, email, or institutional visit. Upon receiving results, consult physicians to understand exact meanings, and establish additional testing or treatment plans for any abnormal findings. Keep checkup results for annual comparison. Observing numerical trends enables early detection of health status changes. Results also serve as reference materials when visiting other hospitals.

10

Post-Checkup Health Management Strategy

When abnormalities are detected in health checkups, immediate detailed examinations are necessary. Most early-detected diseases are treatable, so actively respond rather than neglecting screening results. For cancers especially, early detection critically impacts survival rates. Even with normal results, maintaining healthy lifestyle habits is important. Balanced diet, regular exercise, sufficient sleep, stress management, smoking cessation, and moderate drinking are fundamentals of disease prevention. Those with chronic conditions like hypertension, diabetes, and hyperlipidemia require consistent medication and lifestyle improvements. Regular hospital visits for testing and treatment plan adjustments according to physician instructions are essential. Self-discontinuing medication can cause complications. Exercise extra caution for diseases with family history. If parents or siblings suffered specific conditions, personal disease risk is elevated, warranting more frequent and earlier screening for those conditions. Health checkups are not one-time events but lifelong components of health management. As age increases, screening importance grows, so maintain scheduled screening without omission and strive to maintain healthy living.

Frequently asked questions

How much does national health screening cost?
General health screening requires no personal expense, and cancer screening requires only 10% personal contribution. Medical aid recipients receive completely free screenings.
At what age should I start gastroscopy?
Gastroscopy or upper GI series is recommended every two years from age 40. Those with family history should start earlier.
Which country is this guide based on?
This guide is based on South Korea's national health checkup system. Please consult a medical professional for accurate screening intervals and items.