A doctor and public health expert explains why the new federal guidelines expanding cervical cancer screening to at-home ...
The updated Health Resources and Services Administration guidance now advises that people receive a high-risk HPV test - ...
Every year, more than 13,000 women in the United States are diagnosed with cervical cancer.
When most people hear “cancer,” they think of something obvious, lumps, pain, fatigue. But cervical cancer? It’s sneaky. And ...
The human papillomavirus, or HPV, is the cause of nearly all cervical cancers. But there's good news: HPV vaccinations can help prevent cervical cancer, as well as a host of other cancers caused by ...
Cervical cancer often begins without obvious signs, and many symptoms, like unusual bleeding, pelvic discomfort or changes in ...
Cervical cancer screening is recommended to anybody over the age of 25 who has a cervix and has ever been sexually active.
A woman had to undergo a full hysterectomy aged 34 after doctors found cervical cancer, despite her having no symptoms.
Cervical cancer treatment evolves with molecular screening and immunotherapies, emphasizing early detection as key to ...