Cervical Cancer Research - Symptoms, Vaccine, Screening, Treatment, Human Papilloma Virus (HPV), Information

Cervical Cancer Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Cervical Cancer, including details on symptoms, vaccine, screening, treatment, human papilloma virus (hpv), information.


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Screening for cervical cancer: will women accept less?

Sirovich BE, Woloshin S, Schwartz LM

VA Outcomes Group, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, White River Junction, Vermont 05009, USA. brenda.sirovich@dartmouth.edu

BACKGROUND: U.S. professional organizations increasingly agree that most women require Papanicolaou smear screening every 2 to 3 years rather than annually and that most elderly women may stop screening. We sought to describe the attitudes of women in the United States toward less intense screening, specifically, less frequent screening and eventual cessation of screening. METHODS: We conducted a random-digit-dialing telephone survey of women in 2002 (response rate of 75% among eligible women reached by telephone). A nationally representative sample of 360 women aged 40 years or older with no history of cancer was surveyed about their acceptance of less intense screening. RESULTS: Almost all women aged 40 years or older (99%) had had at least one Pap smear; most (59%) were screened annually. When women were asked to choose their preferred frequency for screening, 75% preferred screening at least annually (12% chose screening every 6 months). Less than half (43%) had heard of recommendations advocating less frequent screening. When advised of such recommendations, half of all women believed that they were based on cost. Sixty-nine percent said that they would try to continue being screened annually even if their doctors recommended less frequent screening and advised them of comparable benefits. Only 35% of women thought that there might come a time when they would stop getting Pap smears; of these, almost half would not stop until after age 80 years. The strongest predictor of reluctance to reduce the frequency of screening was a belief that cost was the basis of current screening frequency recommendations. CONCLUSION: Most women in the United States prefer annual Pap smears and are resistant to the idea of less intense screening. Concern that cost considerations rather than evidence form the basis of screening recommendations may partly explain women's reluctance to accept less intense screening.

Published 7 February 2005 in Am J Med, 118(2): 151-8.
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Cervical Cancer Research Today Archive:

Volume 1 (2004)
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  Issue 5 (December)

Volume 2 (2005)
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Volume 3 (2006)
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Volume 5 (2008)
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Cervical Cancer Books

The Official Patient's Sourcebook on Cervical Cancer: A Revised and Updated Directory for the Internet Age

The Official Patient's Sourcebook on Cervical Cancer: A Revised and Updated Directory for the Internet Age