CERVICAL CANCER SCREENING AND ITS OUTCOME - AN OBSERVATIONAL STUDY Authors: Mashru R , BANERJEE D*, PARMAR D*, POPAT V, PARMAR M AND TANNA D
ABSTRACT
With knowledge of the signs and cancer screening programs, cervical cancer can be
detected early. It has been discovered that with early detection campaigns, the annual incidence
and prevalence have fallen by 50–70% in several developed countries. The incidence of HPV
related cervical happens most in developing countries; because of their poor screening systems
in public healthcare systems. To screen patients for cervical cancer and study the symptoms
presented. We screened 498 women for cervical cancer during our study period i.e., 6 months
in G. G. G. Hospital, Jamnagar. We collected the personal and clinical history of the patients
from the Gynecology department. PAP test was carried out as our routine cytopathology
practice. Patients age ranges from 18 to 86 years and most patients fall between 26 to 45 years.We found 0.6% of patients with cervical cancer. 49.4% of patients were married below the age
of 18 years and more than 90% belonged to the Hindu community. 66% of patients had full-
term vaginal delivery (FTVD) whereas only 1.1% had both Full-term normal delivery and full-
term cesarean section and 93% delivery were institutional delivery. The most common
symptom was white discharge and 65.6% of patients complained about it. The majority of the
women in our study were housewives and were financially dependent on their husbands. There
is a need to improve these cervical cancer screening services so that more women may access
them. More awareness campaigns are required to fill identified knowledge gaps.
Keywords: cervical cancer, malignancy, woman, Parity, awareness, housewives, symptoms Publication date: 15/10/2023 https://ijbpas.com/pdf/2023/October/MS_IJBPAS_2023_OCTOBER_SPCL_1058.pdfDownload PDFhttps://doi.org/10.31032/IJBPAS/2023/12.10.1058