What the Grades Mean and Suggestions for Practice
| Grade |
Definition |
Suggestions for Practice |
| A |
The USPSTF recommends the service. There
is high certainty that the net benefit is
substantial. |
Offer/provide this
service. |
| B |
The USPSTF recommends the service. There
is high certainty that the net benefit is
moderate or there is moderate certainty
that the net benefit is moderate to
substantial. |
Offer/provide this
service. |
| C |
The USPSTF recommends against routinely
providing the service. There may be
considerations that support providing the
service in an individual patient. There is
at least moderate certainty that the net
benefit is small. |
Offer/provide this
service only if other
considerations
support the
offering or
providing the
service in an
individual patient. |
| D |
The USPSTF recommends against the
service. There is moderate or high
certainty that the service has no net
benefit or that the harms outweigh the
benefits. |
Discourage the use of
this service. |
| I Statement |
The USPSTF concludes that the current
evidence is insufficient to assess the
balance of benefits and harms of the
service. Evidence is lacking, of poor
quality, or conflicting, and the balance of
benefits and harms cannot be
determined. |
Read the clinical
considerations
section of USPSTF
Recommendation
Statement. If the
service is offered,
patients should
understand the
uncertainty about
the balance of
benefits and harms. |
Levels of Certainty Regarding Net Benefit
| Level of Certainty* |
Description |
| High |
The available evidence usually includes consistent results from
well-designed, well-conducted studies in representative primary
care populations. These studies assess the effects of the preventive
service on health outcomes. This conclusion is therefore unlikely to
be strongly affected by the results of future studies. |
| Moderate |
The available evidence is sufficient to determine the effects of the
preventive service on health outcomes, but confidence in the estimate
is constrained by such factors as:
- The number, size, or quality of individual studies.
- Inconsistency of findings across individual studies.
- Limited generalizability of findings to routine primary care practice.
- Lack of coherence in the chain of evidence.
As more information becomes available, the magnitude or direction of
the observed effect could change, and this change may be large
enough to alter the conclusion. |
| Low |
The available evidence is insufficient to assess effects on health
outcomes. Evidence is insufficient because of:
- The limited number or size of studies.
- Important flaws in study design or methods.
- Inconsistency of findings across individual studies.
- Gaps in the chain of evidence.
- Findings not generalizable to routine primary care practice.
- Lack of information on important health outcomes.
More information may allow estimation of effects on health
outcomes. |
* The USPSTF defines certainty as "likelihood that the USPSTF assessment of the
net benefit of a preventive service is correct." The net benefit is defined as benefit
minus harm of the preventive service as implemented in a general, primary care
population. The USPSTF assigns a certainty level based on the nature of the
overall evidence available to assess the net benefit of a preventive service.
Current as of June 2007
Internet Citation:
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force Ratings. June 2007. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/uspstf07/ratingsv2.htm