Thank you.
All of the best available evidence on communication does suggest to communicate in absolute numbers. For example, there was a scare many years ago where we thought that the oral contraceptive pill doubled or increased the risk of a blood clot by 100%, but really, it took it from about one in 7,000 to two in 7,000.
I don't think we would ask family doctors to use that 100% increase in blood clots from a birth control pill. We would ask them to give the absolute numbers so that women can make their own informed choices. Whatever choice they make about screening—informed in absolute numbers—should be respected, and however the access wants to be for that, the task force doesn't mind so long as the woman is informed.