Lower colorectal cancer screening age to 45 from 50, Canadian Cancer Society urges
TORONTO — Michael Groves thought he had appendicitis.
In January 2021, he went to the emergency department with abdominal pains, but after testing, medical staff ruled it out and he went home.
A couple of days later, Groves, who lives in Ottawa, saw blood in his stool, so he told his family doctor.
Both the pain and bleeding stopped, but his doctor decided to schedule the 49-year-old for a colonoscopy for that April to be on the safe side.

