U.S. guidelines recommend cervical cancer screening every three to five years starting at 21, the CDC says. The American ...
A modeling study of Norway, which has high HPV vaccination coverage and uniform cervical cancer screening, suggests fewer ...
This Q&A with George Sawaya, MD, explores new cervical cancer screening guidelines issued in January 2026, which recommend at ...
Women who have been vaccinated against human papillomavirus (HPV) should be screened for cervical cancer less often, a study has suggested.1 For women vaccinated at young ages, screening just two or ...
Cervical cancer is one of the most preventable forms of cancer, yet every year, roughly 14,000 women in the U.S. still ...
Know why Pap smear testing is vital for women’s health, how it detects cervical cancer early, and when every woman should ...
Self-collection means swabbing your vagina to get a sample of cells to test in the lab. In this case, the sample is used to ...
Raising awareness about cervical cancer can save young women’s lives. Learn why early education on HPV and reproductive ...
In a modeling study of women vaccinated against human papillomavirus (HPV), researchers found that cervical cancer screening ...
The updated Health Resources and Services Administration guidance now advises that people receive a high-risk HPV test - collected by a patient or physician - every five years for average-risk women ...
January highlights Cervical Cancer Awareness Month, with Nurse Navigator Karla Schlicht sharing essential insights on HPV, ...
Cervical cancer symptoms an NYU Langone Health doctor monitors in her own body include irregular vaginal bleeding, abnormal ...