Insight
Cervical cancer: Why are women shunning the pap smear?
“A PAP smear, No thanks,” says 26-year-old Mary Kaitesi. It’s the same response when I ask 20-year-old Rose, a university student.
The rate at which young girls are shunning the Pap smear test is worrying. Yet it is a harmless test that could save many from cervical cancer. The Pap smear is a screening test for cervical cancer. Cells scraped from the opening of the cervix are examined under a microscope. The cervix is the lower part of the uterus (womb).
Dr Alphonse Butoyi, a gynaecologist at Kanombe Military Hospital says that he sees three to four women per week coming for consultation on the Pap smear test. It’s a similar trend across most healthy facilities across the country.