Yorkshire Post

MP’S CALL ON CANCER SCREENING

Politician urges women to have regular smear tests

- LIZ BATES WESTMINSTE­R CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: elizabeth.bates@JPImedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

A YORKSHIRE MP is urging women to have regular smear tests following a traumatic cancer scare as figures reveal cervical cancer screening rates are at their lowest for two decades.

Sarah Champion recently announced that she was six months cancer-free after an operation to remove abnormal cells from her cervix.

The experience has made her determined to raise awareness about the importance of lifesaving screenings, which many women avoid or forget to attend.

Speaking to The Yorkshire Post, the Rotherham MP said she first found out there was something wrong when she was sent for a biopsy after a routine smear test.

“The biopsy results came back positive for abnormalit­ies and said that they were cancerous,” she said.

“So, then I went back and had to have surgery – just day surgery, where they cut away all the cancerous cells from the cervix.

“I didn’t have any chemothera­py or radiothera­py or anything else like that because it was caught so early. I had no symptoms whatsoever, so had it not been for the smear test I really wouldn’t have known that I had got anything and that is the problem.”

According to the latest figures from Public Health England, 270 women are diagnosed with cervical cancer in Yorkshire and the Humber every year.

However, one quarter of the region’s eligible women – those

aged 25-64 – were not screened for the condition in 2017-18, and across England uptake for the examinatio­n is at a 21-year low.

Ms Champion stressed that the early signs – which can include abnormal bleeding, back pain and discomfort during sex – can be easy to miss. “You can get symptoms like that occasional­ly and you don’t really think anything of it. If it’s treated early it is very simple to treat,” she said.

“If it’s not caught and goes on then you are suddenly getting into some very scary times because it spreads and gets much more complicate­d. I was just really, really lucky.”

The MP, who has been a vocal campaigner on grooming and sexual violence, added that women who have suffered past abuse should not be put off getting regular check-ups.

“There are a large number of women who have had past trauma, childhood trauma, sexual violence in their life, for whom going for a medical interventi­on like that is a very traumatic experience and so they just won’t go,” she said.

“What they need to do is go and speak to the nurse and explain their anxiety because the consequenc­es of not doing that are really devastatin­g and the nurses do understand the situation that some women are in and they can make it a lot more manageable.”

She also urged all girls to get vaccinated against the HPV virus – which can lead to cervical cancer.

To mark Cervical Cancer Prevention Week, which starts today, Ms Champion has teamed up with Jo’s Cervical Cancer Trust to encourage more women to get smear tests.

The charity’s chief executive, Robert Music, said: “Cervical screening provides the best protection against the disease yet attendance is at an all-time low. We want every woman to know how they can reduce their risk of the disease.”

If it’s treated early it is very simple to treat... I was just really, really lucky. Rotherham MP

Sarah Champion.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? NO SYMPTOMS: Sarah Champion underwent surgery after a routine smear test revealed abnormalit­ies.
NO SYMPTOMS: Sarah Champion underwent surgery after a routine smear test revealed abnormalit­ies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom