Cervical cancer may be more common in people over 60 years old than originally believed. However, current screenings suggest that individuals over the age of 65 no longer receive regular cervical ...
We analyzed data from the women's recode files of the Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in LMICs from 2010 to 2019 with variables on cervical cancer screening. We included women 21 years or ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. For decades, cervical cancer has been framed as a problem of youth—something caught early, something prevented young, something ...
Making human papillomavirus (HPV) self-testing available to all women increases the number of people screened for cervical cancer, a new study led by researchers from Te Herenga Waka—Victoria ...
Transient HPV is the norm, whereas persistent high-risk HPV over years drives cervical dysplasia and malignant transformation, supporting longitudinal surveillance when high-risk types are identified.
Cervical cancer screenings are considered one of the most significant public health advances of the past 50 years, particularly in detecting HPV (human papillomavirus), the culprit of most cervical ...
New federal guidelines will make it easier for women to get screened for cervical cancer. According to the new recommendations by the Health Resources and Services Administration, women between the ...
Cervical cancer is one of the most preventable cancers, although recent research suggests that the United States is backsliding in efforts to detect the disease early, when it is most curable.