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         Cervical Cancer:     more books (100)
  1. Why do women participate in the English cervical cancer screening programme? [An article from: Journal of Health Economics] by D.K. Whynes, Z. Philips, et all 2007-03-01
  2. Cervical cancer screening in low-resource settings--which way forward?(Research): An article from: Reproductive Health Matters
  3. Un asunto de mujer y hombre. (cáncer del cuello del útero; doctor Elmer E. Huerta)(TT: A matter of women and men) (TA: cervical cáncer; doctor Elmer E. Huerta)(Interview): An article from: Semana by Olivia P. Tallet, 1998-06-25
  4. Chronic disease reports: deaths from cervical cancer - United States, 1984-1986.: An article from: Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
  5. HPV vaccination offers cervical cancer prevention.(Editorial): An article from: Family Practice News by Michael E. Pichichero, 2005-10-15
  6. La importancia del Papanicolaou.(cáncer uterino; detección)(TT: The importance of Papanicolaou exams.)(TA: cervical cancer; detection): An article from: Semana by Silvia Jimenez, 1999-10-28
  7. Algo más sobre el cáncer cervicouterino, ese indeseable intruso.(TT: Something more about cervical cancer, that unwanted intruder.): An article from: Fem by María del Carmen Calderón Benavides, 2000-03-01
  8. Human Papillomavirus and Cervical Cancer (DISCONTINUED (IARC Scient Pub))
  9. Understanding Cervical Cancer Anatomical Chart
  10. Evidence of the need for cervical cancer screening in adolescents. (Evidence-Based Practice).: An article from: Pediatric Nursing by Carol F. Roye, John Nelson, et all 2003-05-01
  11. Human Papillomaviruses and Cervical Cancer: Biology and Immunology
  12. Long-term pill use, high parity raise cervical cancer risk among women with human papillomavirus infection. (Digests).: An article from: International Family Planning Perspectives by M. Klitsch, 2002-09-01
  13. What women need to know about HPV and cervical cancer: the HPV vaccination is a new weapon in the fight.(HEALTH & FITNESS SECTION): An article from: Ebony by M. Natalie Achong, 2007-07-01
  14. Cervical Cancer - A Medical Dictionary, Bibliography, and Annotated Research Guide to Internet References

121. HealthyWoman 50+
Breast and cervical cancer Early Detection Project. (717)7831457. Breast cancer and cervical cancer can be detected early through early detection methods
http://www.health.state.pa.us/PHP/HW/default.htm

Pennsylvania Department of Health
HealthyWoman Project
Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Project The following link provides information on the Mother's Day Mammograms program. (links to Rite Aid's website) Why the Program is offered
  • Breast cancer produces more Pennsylvania female cancer cases than any other type of cancer, and it is the second leading cause of female cancer death (only lung cancer has more deaths). Breast cancer risk increases with age. Eighty-two percent of Pennsylvania cases occur at age 50 or over, 52% at age 65 or over. African American women age 50+ are at greater risk of having cervical cancer and dying from it than are white women. African Americans have lower 5-year breast cancer survival rates than do white women. Early detection improves survival. Breast cancer and cervical cancer can be detected early through early detection methods:
Breast:
  • clinical breast examinations mammograms self breast examinations
Cervical:
  • Pap tests pelvic examinations If cervical cancer is detected early enough, it is nearly 100 percent curable.

122. Tasmanian Women's Health -Cervical Cancer Information
Provides information on cervical cancer; Pap smears; where to have a Pap smear; answers to common questions; what happens after a Pap smear; abnormal Pap smears
http://www.tased.edu.au/tasonline/twhn/cervcon.htm
Pap Smears, Cervical Cancer and Screening Information
The Tasmanian Cervical Cancer Prevention Program
Provides information on cervical cancer; Pap smears; where to have a Pap smear; answers to common questions; what happens after a Pap smear; abnormal Pap smears; the Tasmanian Cervical Cytology Register; where to get more information.
Promoting Cervical and Breast Screening Course
Provides information about the 'Preventing Cervical and Breast Screening Course' and Resource Kit, including background to the course; resource kit and course contents; where and how to get more information.
How are Tasmanian Medical Students Learning to Perform Pap Smears?
Provides information on the Clinical Teaching Associates Program; why the Program is important; who the Clinical Teaching Associates are; what happens in a Teaching Session; program effectiveness; organisers of the program; where to get more information about the program.
Back to Main Page
The Tasmanian Women's Health Network Web Site was constructed and developed by Carolyn Frohmader of Spotted Dog Consultancies.

123. Women's Health - Illinois Department Of Public Health
Illinois Breast and cervical cancer Program. Frequently Asked Questions. What is the Illinois Breast and cervical cancer Program?
http://www.idph.state.il.us/about/womenshealth/owhbccp.htm
Home Health Concerns Publications Illinois Breast and Cervical Cancer Program ... Education and Funding Opportunities
Illinois Breast and Cervical Cancer Program Frequently Asked Questions What is the Illinois Breast and Cervical Cancer Program? The Illinois Breast and Cervical Cancer Program offers free mammograms, breast exams, pelvic exams and Pap tests to eligible women. Funded cooperatively by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Illinois Department of Public Health, the program was created to provide breast and cervical cancer screening and referrals to low- income, uninsured women. Since the program was launched in Illinois in 1995, almost 35,000 women have been screened for breast and cervical cancers. In 2000, the U.S. Congress enacted the Breast and Cervical Cancer Prevention and Treatment Act. The Illinois General Assembly followed with similar legislation in May 2001, which was signed into law effective in July 2001. Since August 1, 2001, the IBCCP has been referring enrolled women to the Illinois Department of Public Aid for assistance with cancer treatment; there is no cost for eligible women. Who is eligible for this program?

124. FORCES - THE EVIDENCE - Smoking And Cervical Cancer
SMOKING AND cervical cancer Index of studies indicating that new techniques prove that smoking has been falsely blamed for this disease.
http://www.forces.org/evidence/evid/cervical.htm
Forces International Back to The evidence
SMOKING AND CERVICAL CANCER
Back to main page Virus Blamed for all Cervical Cancers - Those who are in the movement fighting the scientific frauds of the anti-tobacco cartel certainly remember the media blitz about cervical cancer being caused by smoking. "Now fresh evidence suggests that a virus may be the sole cause of cervical cancer - adding weight to calls for new tests and vaccines." The media is strangely silent on the issue. Studies Implicate HPV in Bladder Cancer, HPV May Be The Key To "Excess Smoking Risk" - With state of the art detection techniques, HPV is now found in nearly 100% of cervical cancers. HPV infection is more common among smokers due to riskier sexual behavior, which resulted in confounding in older studies that falsely implicated smoking. Cervical Cancer - Note that despite the publication in April 1996, in JNCI Monograph 21, of the NIH Consensus Statement on cervical cancer that is tantamount to abandoning the claim that smoking causes cervical cancer, in 1997 JNCI still published two letters attempting to insinuate that there is such a connection. Smoking and Cervical Cancer - In a recent paper, A N Phillips and George Davey demonstrated mathematically that smoking could be falsely blamed for cervical cancer by failure to detect all exposure to a causative pathogen with a high risk...

125. SMJ June 1996 - Radical Hysterectomy For Stage IB Cervical Cancer:...
Radical Hysterectomy for Stage IB cervical cancer Recurrence Interval as a Predictor of Survival. MICHAEL A. FINAN, MD, AHMED A. ABDOH
http://www.sma.org/smj/96jun7.htm
Radical Hysterectomy for Stage IB Cervical Cancer: Recurrence Interval as a Predictor of Survival
MICHAEL A. FINAN, MD, AHMED A. ABDOH, PhD, JAMES V. FIORICA, MD, MITCHEL S. HOFFMAN, MD, WILLIAM S. ROBERTS, MD, and DENIS CAVANAGH, MD, Tampa, Fla ABSTRACT:
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Between 1978 and 1991, 212 patients with stage IB carcinoma of the cervix were surgically treated by members of the Division of Gynecologic Oncology at the University of South Florida College of Medicine in Tampa. Of these 212 patients, 200 were included in the study group. Excluded were those who had received preoperative radiotherapy, had carcinoma of the cervical stump, or had not had radical hysterectomy because metastatic or extensive disease was encountered on surgical exploration. Surgical management included a Rutledge type III radical hysterectomy with a bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy; para-aortic lymphadenectomy was done selectively when indicated. Ovarian conservation was maintained for younger patients when appropriate. Postoperative radiotherapy was administered for patients with risk factors for recurrence, including (individually or in combination) positive lymph nodes, large tumor volume, deep invasion, positive capillary lymphatic space involvement, and lower uterine segment involvement, as previously reported.1 As is a common practice for reporting survival data, our survival curves are oriented with the initial surgical treatment as "time zero."
RESULTS
During the 5-year follow-up (median follow-up of 2.8 years; range, 1 to 5 years), 31 of the 200 patients (15.5%) had recurrence. Thirteen of these 31 (41.9%) died of cancer during the study period; one died of intercurrent disease. The mortality rate for the entire study sample was 7% (14/200). Survival of the patients with recurrence was directly proportional to the recurrence time (

126. Cervical Cancer / Cancer Of The Cervix
cervical cancer / Cancer of the Cervix. cervical cancer occurs at the cervix which is the opening to the womb. The highest incidence
http://www.eurohealth.ie/cancom/cercan1.htm
Cervical Cancer / Cancer of the Cervix
Cervical cancer occurs at the cervix which is the opening to the womb.
The highest incidence of cervical cancer occurs in women aged 40-55.
Each year in Ireland, over 60 women die of cervical cancer.
Nearly 70% of women who die from cervical cancer have not hadroutine smear tests.
The majority of cervical cancer cases can be successfullyprevented if detected early enough by regular
smear tests.
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • The most common symptom is vaginal bleeding after intercourse. Bleeding between periods may be also abnormal. Offensive vaginal discharge may also be a symptom.
In the early stages of the disease, there may be no obvious signs or symptoms that will tell a woman she is at risk. The only way to detect cancerous cells is by having a regular smear test every 2-3 years.
RISK FACTORS
  • Genital infection with the human papilloma virus (HPV), which in some cases causes genital warts, plays a role in the development of cervical cancer.
    HPV is passed on during sexual intercourse with an infected partner.

127. ABCNEWS.com : A Vaccine For Cervical Cancer?
The results of a new study have cancer specialists excited about a vaccine that was 100 percent effective in preventing the leading cause of cervical cancer.
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/living/DailyNews/cervicalcancervaccine021120.html
var SectionID="Living"; var SubsectionID="DailyNews"; var NameID="cervicalcancervaccine021120"; June 7, 2004 FEATURED SERVICES RELATIONSHIPS SHOPPING DOWNLOADS WIRELESS ... FREE HEADLINE FEED INTERACT BOARDS CHAT NEWS ALERTS CONTACT ABC
Could this treatment mean the end of cervical cancer?
Results of a new study signal hopes that cervical cancer may be prevented in the future. (PhotoDisc) The Cancer Vaccine of the Future? Study Proves It's Possible, Experts Believe It's on the Horizon
By Jamie Cohen
Nov. 20
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Mom Hopes Mystery Boy Is Her Son
... Lowly Fruit Fly's Amazing Flight Secrets MORE ON THIS STORY The results of a new study have cancer specialists excited about a vaccine that was 100 percent effective in preventing one type of human papillomavirus, or HPV, the leading cause of cervical cancer. This discovery opens a new door in the battle against cancer, offering proof that it is possible to prevent the cause of a cancer before it ever develops. There were nearly 13,000 cases of cervical cancer in the United States last year that claimed 4,400 lives. With this breakthrough, there is reason to hope that "we could in our lifetime see the gradual but progressive dismantling of the barriers to preventing cervical cancer," said an editorial by Dr. Christopher P. Crum, the director of the Women's and Perinatal Pathology Division of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.

128. Cervical Cancer
CTFPHC Systematic Reviews Recommendations. Please select the format in which you want to view this review Screening for cervical cancer.
http://www.ctfphc.org/Sections/section10ch073.htm
Please select the format in which you want to view this review:
Screening for Cervical Cancer
Back to Neoplasms
CTFPHC Home Page Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care
For any technical issues please contact: webmaster@ctfphc.org
Last modified: June 10, 1998.

129. HERO HealthHints - Women's Health: Focus On Cervical Cancer (March/April, 1998)
Volume 2, Number 3 March/April, 1998 Women s Health Focus on cervical cancer. Editor Women s health Focus on cervical cancer From
http://fcs.tamu.edu/health/Health_Education_Rural_Outreach/Health_Hints/1998/Mar
Topic Index Issue Date Index Health FCS Home
Volume 2, Number 3 - March/April, 1998
Women's Health:
Focus on Cervical Cancer Editor:
Carol A. Rice, Ph.D., RN
Associate Professor and Extension Specialist-Health Education Associate Editor:
Janet M. Pollard, MPH
Extension Associate-Health Table of Contents Women's health: Focus on cervical cancer From adolescents and puberty through menopause, women cope with unique health issues. Among women aged 25-44, cancer, accidents, and heart disease, respectively, are the three most common causes of death. Among older women, heart disease and cancer are the leading causes of death (Kemper, 1997). This issue of HealthHints takes a look at one of the most common cancers among women, cervical cancer. We will look at its causes, as well as how to detect, treat, and prevent such cancer. Additionally, this issue of HealthHints will take a brief look at other women's health concerns such as heart disease, and the risk-reducing behavior, exercise, specifically walking.

130. Treatment Of Cervical Cancer At Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic Medical Services cervical cancer. Treatment of cervical cancer at Mayo Clinic. The cervix (mouth of the womb) is the lower
http://www.mayoclinic.org/cervicalcancer/
Home About Mayo Clinic Contact Us Mayo Clinic Locations: Arizona Florida Minnesota Mayo Clinic ... Medical Services Cervical Cancer Cervical Cancer Treatment Diagnosis and Staging Risk Factors Appointments ... Medical Services
Treatment of Cervical Cancer at Mayo Clinic
The cervix (mouth of the womb) is the lower part of the uterus and connects the body of the uterus to the vagina. According to the American Cancer Society, cervical cancer accounts for about 6 percent of all cancers in women in the United States. Most cervical cancers begin as abnormal, or precancerous, changes in the lining of the cervix. These changes can be detected through regular Pap smears. The survival rate for cervical cancer that is caught before it has spread is nearly 100 percent. The overall survival rate for all stages is 69 percent. Treatment depends on the stage of the cancer. It may include surgery, radiation or chemotherapy or a combination of any or all of the available treatments. A patient's age, desire to have children and general medical condition all play a role in planning the best treatment. Early cancer (Stage IA) may be treated with fertility-maintaining surgery. Surgery will be the likely treatment for early stage (IB, IIA) cervical cancer. It usually involves removing the uterus and cervix and lymph nodes in the pelvis and possibly the aortic region (radical hysterectomy). In young women, ovaries may remain intact to ensure normal hormone production. Stages IIB through IV are generally treated with pelvic radiation alone or in combination with chemotherapy.

131. Breast And Cervical Cancer Control Program
Breast and cervical cancer Control Program. Women s Cancer Screening Program in Michigan. 2. What are the recommended screening guidelines for cervical cancer?
http://www.michigan.gov/mdch/1,1607,7-132-2940_2955-13487--,00.html
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Breast and Cervical Cancer Control Program
Women's Cancer Screening Program in Michigan
Where Are These Services Available?
Women throughout Michigan may seek these services from local health departments and over 700 contracted BCCCP providers across the state. Services are also available through tribal health clinics of federally recognized Indian tribes.
A woman's usual health care provider may encourage the woman to take advantage of this program. In addition, any Michigan woman ages 40 through 64 can call (toll-free) 800-922-MAMM to obtain a phone number for the BCCCP local coordinating agency closest to her home. The local agency will assess each woman for program eligibility, based upon age and income, and will provide an appointment to a health care provider or clinic near her home. For the name and number of the local BCCCP agency nearest you , call (toll-free) 800-922-MAMM or click here to download a county-by-county list of local BCCCP coordinating agencies within Michigan. (available as an Adobe Acrobat PDF file)*
Provider Participation
BCCCP services are coordinated through 20 local health departments across Michigan, as well as the Karmanos Cancer Institute in Detroit. These agencies have enlisted the cooperation and participation of physicians, hospitals, and other health care organizations in their communities to assure that all necessary follow-up services are provided.

132. Hospital Practice: Human Papillomavirus And The Risk Of Cervical Cancer
Human Papillomavirus and the Risk of cervical cancer ROBERT D. BURK Albert Einstein College of Medicine Human papillomavirus (HPV) is now recognized as the
http://www.hosppract.com/issues/1999/11/burk.htm
Human Papillomavirus and the Risk of Cervical Cancer
ROBERT D. BURK
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Human papillomavirus (HPV) is now recognized as the driving force behind the dysregulation of the cell cycle that underlies cervical malignant transformation. Although nearly all cervical cancers contain HPV genomes, the vast majority of HPVs are not oncogenic but merely induce benign lesions. Because progressive abnormalities take at least a decade to develop into invasive cancers, young women with low-grade lesions can often be managed with watchful waiting rather than ablative therapy.
Dr. Burk is Professor, Division of Genetics, Departments of Pediatrics, Microbiology and Immunology, and Epidemiology and Social Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University, Bronx, N. Y. His work is supported in part by grants from the National Institutes of Health (AI31055, CA78527). For more than 100 years, scientists have recognized that cervical cancerthe second most prevalent malignancy in women worldwideis caused by a sexually transmitted agent. Before the development of recombinant DNA technology, herpes was assumed to be the culprit. Few investigators suspected a wart virus, because high-grade human papillomavirus (HPV) lesions are not morphologically "wart-like" but typically flat. In 1956, Leopold G. Koss became the first to describe the unusual structure of the squamous cells associated with these lesions (large cells with exaggerated, hyperchromatic nuclei and an often sharply demarcated perinuclear clear zone), which he termed "koilocytotic atypia" or "koilocytosis," from the Greek koilos, meaning hollow (Figure 1).

133. Hawaii Breast And Cervical Cancer Control Program
Hawaii Breast and cervical cancer Control Program. Excluding skin cancer, breast cancer is the most common cancer among American
http://www.state.hi.us/health/resource/cancer/

134. Disease Category Listing (30): Cervical Cancer
Clinical Trials cervical cancer. Georgia. New York. New York; ColumbiaPresbyterian Medical Center Study for patients with cervical cancer. Pennsylvania.
http://www.centerwatch.com/patient/studies/cat30.html
Clinical Trials: Cervical Cancer
Georgia
GOG-0201 Treatment of patients with Stage IB2 Carcinoma of the Cervix: A Randomized comparison of Radical Hysterectomy and Tailored Chemo-Radiation versus Primary Chemo-Radiation. Savannah; Memorial Health Research Center
A Phase II Evaluation of Bevacizumab (rHuMAB VEGF) in the Treatment of Persistent or Recurrent Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Cervix (GOG 227-C)
Kentucky
Lexington; Central Baptist Hospital Clinical Research Center
Brookview 2001: Cervical and Endometrial Carcinoma Study.
New York
New York; Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center
Study for patients with cervical cancer
Pennsylvania
Pittsburgh; Primary Physicians Research
Primary Physicians Research conducts a variety of studies concerning women's health issues.
Virginia
Charlottesville; University of Virginia
Capecitabine in the Treatment of Persistent or Recurrent Non-squamous Carcinoma of the Cervix Charlottesville; University of Virginia
Paclitaxel + Cisplatin v. Vinorelbine + Cisplatin in Stage IVB, Recurrent or Persistent Cervical CA Charlottesville; University of Virginia

135. Cancer
Figures from the American Cancer Society. cervical cancer and partners circumcision status. In cervical cancer vaccine success. A
http://www.circumstitions.com/Cancer.html
Circumcision and Cancer Cancer is a terrifying malady, and the threat of it has been a powerful motivation for circumcising babies, reaching its nadir in David Reuben's compendium of misinformation, Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Sex... with its "... and the remedy for penile cancer is CASTRATION. And THAT is THAT." Who would not circumcise to prevent castration? The reality is more ambiguous.
Penile Cancer
Penile cancer is one of the rarest cancers - rarer even than breast cancer in men - and figures for it are hard to come by. Circumcised men get penile cancer at about the same tiny rate as intact men. Studies that seemed to show a correlation had not been corrected for age; penile cancer is a disease of old men, and the old men with cancer in the studies had simply been born at a time when circumcision was less customary than when the younger men without cancer were born. When men of the same ages were compared, the correlation vanished. This graph illustrates both the rarity of penile cancer and its lack of connection with circumcision: (If you do not see the graph at full size , click here.)

136. About Us Page For The Breast & Cervical Cancer Program
Breast cervical cancer Program. Welcome to the Breast cervical cancer Program. DHHS has provided funding for a Breast and Cervical
http://www.dhhs.state.nh.us/DHHS/BCCP/default.htm
Home Advanced Search DCDP BCCP ABOUT US CONTACT INFO ELIGIBILITY FAQs LAWS-RULES-POLICIES ... LIBRARY
DHHS has provided funding for a Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening Program since 1985. In 1990, the US Congress passed the Breast and Cervical Cancer Mortality Prevention Act that mandated and provided funding for the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program. NH has combined its state resources with federal funding since 1993, greatly expanding NH's ability to provide a statewide Breast and Cervical Cancer Control Program. The program offers eligible participants access to the following services:
  • Women's Health Exam
  • Mammography
  • Pap Smear
  • Gynecology Exam
The mission of NH's Let No Woman Be Overlooked Breast and Cervical Cancer Program is to plan, promote and implement programs of education and screening to reduce the mortality rates, through early detection, of breast and cervical cancer among NH women. This mission is carried out statewide through a comprehensive program which addresses the seven component areas of:
  • screening

137. Uterine And Cervical Cancer File: Promising New Treatments
The Uterine and cervical cancer FileSM C E N T E R F O R C U R R E N T R E S E A R C H. The Uterine and cervical cancer File brings you the inside story on
http://www.lifestages.com/health/uterinec.html
The Uterine and Cervical Cancer File SM
C E N T E R F O R C U R R E N T R E S E A R C H
Approved
by
Physicians'
Home Page
Medinex
Seal of Approval
WellnessWeb:
The Patient's Network
HONcode Principles of the Health On the Net Foundation Partners of CareData.com W Uterine and Cervical Cancer File Uterine and Cervical Cancer File Uterine and Cervical Cancer File
informs you about studies at such renowned institutions as the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at UC Irvine, Yale University School of Medicine, and the Division of Radiation Oncology at M. D. Anderson Cancer Center. The Uterine and Cervical Cancer File brings you the inside story on: Chemotherapy for Uterine and Cervical Cancer Radiotherapy for Uterine and Cervical Cancer Combination Therapies Surgical Treatments Genetic Issues in Cancer Care Alternative Therapies for Uterine and Cervical Cancer General Studies in Uterine and Cervical Cancer Free access to full-text articles on uterine and cervical cancer management And much more . . .

138. The Breast And Cervical Cancer Screening Program (BCCP)
The Breast and cervical cancer Screening Program (BCCP). In 1992 the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene received a
http://mdpublichealth.org/cancer/html/bccp.html
Center for Cancer Surveillance and Control Council on Physical Fitness Genetics and Children Center for Maternal and Child Health Chronic Disease Prevention Child and Adolescent Health Health Promotion, Education Injury Prevention and Health Assessment Primary Care And Rural Health Oral Health Deer's Head Center Western Maryland Center CCSC HOME Notice of Privacy Practices CCSC DIVISIONS Maryland Cancer Registry State Council on Cancer Control Breast and Cervical Cancer Program Screening Program ... Cigarette Restitution Fund Program SPECIAL PROGRAMS Colon Cancer Screening Program Coalition for Skin Cancer Prevention in Maryland Comprehensive Cancer Planning In Maryland CRF Local Public Health CANCER DATA CRF Annual Cancer Report , 2003 Annual Cancer Report, CRF, 2002 (Errata) Maryland Cancer Survey Report , 2002 ... Insurance Mandates PHYSICIAN RESOURCES Physician Materials Participating Providers in Breast and Cervical Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment Database Search Medical Assistance Providers Search CANCER RESOURCES Guidelines and Factsheets WWW Links Cancer Publications
The Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening Program (BCCP)
In 1992 the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene received a grant from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to provide breast and cervical cancer screening services to low income, uninsured or underinsured women. In 1997, the grant was renewed for an additional five years. The Maryland legislature, in 1998, made state funds available to supplement the CDC grant. These funds will pay for an annual clinical breast examination, annual mammogram and pap smears, as needed, for women 40 -64 years of age and for women over 65, if they do not have Medicare Part B. Participants in the program must be Maryland residents with family incomes less than 250% of the federal poverty level and not have insurance with screening benefits.

139. Abnormal Pap Smear: Hpv Human Papillomavirus, Cervical Dysplasia
Book by Lynda Rushing, M.D. and Nancy Joste, M.D. about pap smears test results and the human papillomavirus (HPV) and its connection to cervical dysplasia and cancer. Site includes excerpt from the book, ordering information, and profiles of the authors.
http://www.abnormalpapsmears.com/
If you have accessed this web site, the chances are very high that you or someone you know has had an abnormal Pap smear. You are not alone in this experience, as it is estimated that over 3 million women in the United States alone receive this news. We have learned, through our work as directors of cytology laboratories that diagnose Pap smears, of women's need for a clear and easily accessible source of information about their diagnosis. Our book, Abnormal Pap Smears: What Every Woman Needs to Know, is written for women like you.
Abnormal Pap Smears: What Every Woman Needs to Know As cytopathologists and medical directors of cytology laboratories, we have spent years training for our profession, and we now spend good portions of typical working days diagnosing abnormal Pap smears. When speaking with women who were receiving our diagnoses, however, it became apparent that they were typically poorly informed about the specifics of their diagnoses, about the Pap smear procedure itself, a test that samples a woman's cervix for cervical cancer or its precancers, known as cervical dysplasia or 'SIL' (squamous intraepithelial lesion) . Women also were not well-informed about the proven correlation between the STD human papillomavirus (HPV), the primary cause of abnormal Pap smears, and about the connection of HPV to cervical cancer. Our motivation to write Abnormal Pap Smears: What Women Need to Know

140. CNN - Why Cigarettes Can Be A Woman's Worst Enemy - November 8, 1999
Smoking increases your risk of cervical and rectal cancer; worsens your period; damages your fertility; hurts your unborn baby; ages you; attacks your heart.
http://cnn.com/HEALTH/women/9911/08/women.smoking.2.wmd/index.html
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Why cigarettes can be a woman's worst enemy
November 8, 1999 Web posted at: 3:00 PM EST (2000 GMT) In this story: Smoking increases your risk of cervical and rectal cancer Smoking worsens your period Smoking damages your fertility Smoking hurts your unborn baby ... RELATEDS By Peg Rosen (WebMD) Sure, cigarettes can harm anybody, men and women alike. But some of smoking's ill effects, from ectopic pregnancy to premature menopause, are reserved for women only. This November 19 is the American Cancer Society's 22nd Great American Smokeout. If you haven't decided to give up smoking yet, here are some compelling reasons to quit now. Smoking increases your risk of cervical and rectal cancer Not only can smoking cause a variety of cancers in both men and women, it puts women at higher risk of cervical cancer, according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG). A Danish study published in the April 21, 1999, issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute finds that premenopausal women who smoke are six times more likely to develop rectal cancer than those who don't.

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