Cancer And The Pap Smear
Deaths from cervical cancer have decreased dramatically in the past 60 years, thanks to early detection by the Pap smear, a screening test that women usually get every year. But a new study in the New England Journal of Medicine finds that for women who are at low risk, the number of additional cancers caught by annual screening is vanishingly small, comparable to the number of men who get breast cancer. This gives statistical support to the advice of the American Cancer Society, which recommended last year that women who have three or more negative tests can be safely screened once every three years. Women in high-risk categories ask your doctor should continue to be screened annually.
Most Popular »
- Your Turn, Canada: A Second-By-Second Look at Jeremy Lin Lighting Up Toronto
- Love Ever After: A Valentine’s Day Special
- Linsanity Heads East, Linfects China and Taiwan
- Can Jeremy Lin End The MSG/Time Warner Cable War?
- After Whitney Houston, Musicians Say: I'm Afraid
- Move Over, Pajama Jeans: Dress-Pant Sweatpants Have Arrived
- Music: White Lies and The White Stripes
- Top 10 Famous Love Letters
- Roving the Red Planet
- Rick Santorum Wants to Fight 'The Dangers Of Contraception'
- Beirut: Where Valentine's Day Belongs to Another Kind of Saint
- Europe's Deep Freeze: Why Climate Change Is Not (Entirely) to Blame
- Under Armour's Big Step Up
- Archaeology in Jerusalem: Digging Up Trouble
- The Power of Make-Believe
- Russian Kids in America: When The Adopted Can't Adapt
- What Happens When We Die?
- How Not to Raise a Bully: The Early Roots of Empathy
- Burning Desire For Freedom
- Friends With Benefits




