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screening
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screening

Systematic search for evidence of a disease, or of conditions that may precede it, in people who are at risk but not suffering from any symptoms. The aim of screening is to try to limit ill health from preventable diseases that might otherwise go undetected in the early stages. Examples are hypothyroidism and phenylketonuria, for which all newborn babies in Western countries are screened; breast cancer (mammography) and cervical cancer; and stroke, for which high blood pressure is a known risk factor.

The criteria for a successful screening programme are that the disease should be important and treatable, the population at risk identifiable, the screening test acceptable, accurate, and cheap, and that the results of screening should justify the costs involved.



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Secondary prevention of cervical cancer Cervical cytology George Papanicolaou initially described the examination of posterior vaginal fornix cells to detect precursors for cervical cancer in 1928.
Other updated or new sections include those on health maintenance, cervical cytology with human papilloma virus subtyping, contraception, polycystic ovarian syndrome, osteoporosis, neonatal complications, and HIV.
Combined with cytology findings (Pap smears), they help determine which women with abnormal (ASCUS*) cervical cytology results should be referred for immediate colposcopy, biopsy and treatment.
 
 
 
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