"PAP" TESTING AND HYSTERECTOMY PREVALENCE: A SURVEY OF COMMUNITIES WITH HIGH AND LOW CERVICAL CANCER RATES

Stern, E. (U. of California School of Public Health, Los Angeles, CA 90024), M. MIsczynskI, S. Greenland, K. Damus and A. Coulson. “Pap” testing and hysterectomy prevalence: A survey of communities with high and low cervical cancer rates. Am J Epidemiol 106: 296–305, 1977. There is an inverse relati...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: STERN, ELIZABETH, MISCZYNSKI, MARILYN, GREENLAND, SANDER, DAMUS, KARLA, COULSON, ANNE
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 1977
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Online Access:http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/106/4/296
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Summary:Stern, E. (U. of California School of Public Health, Los Angeles, CA 90024), M. MIsczynskI, S. Greenland, K. Damus and A. Coulson. “Pap” testing and hysterectomy prevalence: A survey of communities with high and low cervical cancer rates. Am J Epidemiol 106: 296–305, 1977. There is an inverse relation between cervical cancer rates and income in Los Angeles County communities, and there is a positive association between level of Papanicolaou (Pap) testing and income. Ethnic differences in cervical cancer rates and Pap testing are dependent on income. The relatively high rate of cervical cancer and low level of systematic screening in low income communities suggest that a community trial to assess the value of cytologic screening in reducing cervical cancer rates is feasible. Information on hysterectomy prevalence by type of procedure supports the idea that the long-observed decline in cervical cancer rates is in part attributable to a concomitant decrease in the ratio of subtotal to total hysterectomy.