Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Screening. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Screening. Afficher tous les articles

mercredi 20 juin 2012

Cervical Cancer Screening - An

All women should have annual Pap smears beginning at age 21, according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Women 21 to 29 should get a Pap every two years, then annually from ages 30 to 64. Beginning cervical cancer screening through Pap smears within three years of having vaginal sexual intercourse or no later than 21 years of age. Depending on the type of Pap test utilized and the test results, cervical cancer screening should be done every one to two years until a woman reaches the age of thirty. Once a woman reaches age 30, she may begin Pap smear screenings for cervical cancer every two to three years providing she has had at least three consecutive Pap smear with normal results. Some women who have other health issues such as HIV or a compromised immune system may need to have more frequent cervical cancer screenings. Women who have reached age 70 and who have had at least three normal Pap smear results and no abnormal Pap smear results for the last ten years may decide to stop cervical cancer screening through Pap smear completely. Women who have had a total hysterectomy do not need Pap smears unless the hysterectomy was performed for cancer or precancerous conditions. Women who have had a subtotal hysterectomy (leaving the cervix intact) need to follow the same guidelines as for other women and continue Pap smear screenings for cervical cancer until they are 70 years old.

While these new cervical cancer screening guidelines are more lenient for women who regularly have Pap smears, it's important to note that an estimated 50 percent of diagnosed cases of cervical cancer in the United States occur in women who have never had a Pap smear. Another 10 percent of diagnosed cases of cervical cancer occur in women who have not had a Pap smear in the last five years.

Remember, your best protection against future cervical cancer diagnosis and survival is to strictly adhere to your personal healthcare provider's advice about when you need to be screened for cervical cancer.


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lundi 14 novembre 2011

A.M. Vitals: More Aggressive Cholesterol Screening for Kids to Be Advised

Screening Kids: Guidelines expected to be presented Sunday by members of National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute panel will call for screening more kids for high cholesterol, the Associated Press reports. Panel members wouldn’t reveal details of the new recommendations ahead of the presentation — which will be at a meeting of the American Heart Association — but said they would include “more aggressive recommendations for cholesterol screening and treatment in children,” the AP says.

Waiting for Monday: Will cases concerning the health-care overhaul law be reviewed by the Supreme Court soon? On Monday at 10 a.m. the court will issue its next round of orders on pending cases, the WSJ’s Law Blog reports, which means there could be some health-law news then. Kaiser Health News has a helpful scoreboard tracking challenges to the law.

Oops: Brain researchers say presidential candidate Rick Perry’s debate gaffe the other night — he couldn’t come up with the third federal agency he’d like to see axed — can be explained by several different possible mechanisms, the New York Times’ Well blog reports. Distraction, a racing mind, interference from past memories or stress all could have interfered with the candidate’s brain’s ability to retrieve the information he was searching for, the NYT says.

Controversial Notion: Results from a 26-patient study published in the New England Journal of Medicine suggest alcoholics with very severe hepatitis needn’t wait until they have been sober for six months before they receive a life-saving liver transplant, the Associated Press reports. That idea is likely to be controversial since donor organs are already in short supply, with more than 1,400 Americans dying in 2010 before they could receive a liver transplant, the AP says.

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