According to the charity's research, 69% of respondents believed that cervical cancer was hereditary - but this isn't necessarily true, explains Dr Shirin Lakhani, a GP and women's health specialist.
Cervical cancer rates are on the rise among younger women, owing in part to a lack of screening and prevention.
Omni Family Health Omni Family Health is raising awareness about cervical cancer and the importance of early detection ...
Parents generally don’t pass cervical cancer directly to their children, but some rare genetic conditions can increase the ...
A research team has, for the first time in the world, revealed the identity and differentiation process of human cervical ...
It's time for researchers to reconsider the current paradigm of cancer as a genetic disease, argue authors of a new essay. It's time for researchers to reconsider the current paradigm of cancer as ...
Cervical cancer often shows no signs until it has already spread, dramatically increasing the risk of death. To get to the bottom of this concerning trend, AXA Health Insurance surveyed women in ...
However, the new study focused specifically on cervical cancer, the vast majority of cases of which are ... “They took each one of those sites and coded it so that they could find exactly what genetic ...
A Japanese research team has discovered a novel global cooperative phenomena of cell interactions in cervical cancer cells. Their findings suggest that the cells are metabolically connected in a ...
The authors highlight that cervical cancer accounts for 2% of new cancer cases in women in the UK, affecting over 3,000 people each year, with those from more socioeconomically deprived areas ...