Burton Mail

60,000 have missed cervical screening tests

THE VITAL HEALTH CHECK CAN SPOT EARLY SIGNS OF CANCER

- By JENNY MOODY jennifer.moody@reachplc.com

NEARLY 60,000 women in Staffordsh­ire alone have missed their latest smear test, shocking figures have revealed.

At the end of December last year, more than a quarter of women and people with a cervix aged 25 to 49 (27.7 per cent) and a quarter of those aged 50 to 64 (24.2 per cent) were not up to date with their cervical screening.

Screening coverage for those aged 25 to 49, who should be tested every three years, was 72.3 per cent in Staffordsh­ire at the end of December 2021. That was down from 72.4 per cent in December 2020, and down from 75.5 per cent in December 2019.

That means of those eligible to be screened, 37,640 in this age group in Staffordsh­ire were not up to date with the vital health check at the end of last year.

Those aged 50 to 64 should be tested every five years. In Staffordsh­ire, 75.8 per cent of those in this age group were up to date with screening at the end of December, leaving 20,882 unchecked, which was down from 76 per cent in December 2020, and down from 77.2 per cent in December 2019.

December 2021 saw the lowest level of coverage for this age group since at least March 2013.

Samantha Dixon, chief executive of Jo’s Cervical Cancer Trust, said: “Cervical screening is vitally important – it can help to stop cancer before it starts, saving lives. Yet in some parts of the country as few as one in two women and people with a cervix don’t attend cervical screening when invited.

“This can be for a number of reasons. Some aren’t able to find an appointmen­t that fits around work commitment­s, while some feel anxious or embarrasse­d. Others may have experience­d sexual violence, or are living with endometrio­sis, menopause or vaginismus.”

Across England, just 67.9 per cent of those aged 25 to 49 invited to screening had had a test in the previous three years as of March last year. That was the lowest level since records began in 2002.

Rates had improved slightly in March 2020, when 70.2 per cent of those in this age group had been tested. However, generally the proportion going to their screening has been falling since a high of 74.0 per cent in March 2010 – a peak most likely due to the Jade Goody effect, following publicity around the reality star’s illness and death from cervical cancer in March 2009.

Among those aged 50 to 64, 72.1 per cent had been tested in the previous five years as of March 2021, down from 74.6 per cent in 2020 and 74.8 per cent in 2019. It was the lowest rate in 20 years.

Invitation­s for cervical screening were suspended in April 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic and resumed from June 2020. While those with symptoms or previous history were still seen, checks were put on hold for those who were lower risk.

Cervical screening checks a sample of cells from the cervix for certain types of human papillomav­irus (HPV). These types of HPV can cause abnormal changes to the cells, which can go on to cause cancer, and are called “high risk” types of HPV.

If these types of HPV are found during screening (an HPV positive result), the sample of cells is then checked for abnormal changes. If abnormal cells are not treated, they may turn into cervical cancer.

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