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Most doctors would tell you yes.

I'd urge every woman to do her reading and make an informed decision about the need for and value of these exams. Pap tests are never compulsory, never! The pap test like any other cancer screening test has risks and benefits and legally and ethically requires your informed consent. Fewer than 1% of women benefit from pap tests (0.65%) according to American pathologist, Richard DeMay - 0.35% get false negatives and may be disadvantaged by testing and 99% derive no benefit at all. (I've seen figures even less impressive - in Australiathe lifetime risk of Cervical cancer is 0.65% and around 0.45% benefit from smears)

Look at your risk profile before deciding to have pap tests. The Finnish program provides some protection from false positives - they offer 5 yearly screening from age 30, 5 to 7tests in total. They have the lowest rates of cc in the world and send the fewest women for colposcopy/biopsies. (fewer false positives) Annual and biannual testing is over-testing and produces very high rates of false positives and over-treatment. Annual will send 95% of women at some point for colposcopy/biopsies - Two yearly - 78%

Three yearly - 65% Five yearly - still high at 35%-55% (depending on the research) Almost all referrals are false positives.

Women under 25 (some say 30) do not benefit from testing, but produce very high rates of false positives. CC in this group is VERY rare and rare in all age groups. The tiny Death Rate from cc in young women remains the same whether you screen or not.

It's important to do your reading and control your healthcare - unnecessary treatments and biopsies to the cervix can cause damage and lead to infertility, miscarriages, high risk pregnancy, premature babies, more c-sections and psych issues.

The use of stirrups is another disturbing feature of your system - they are not used in consult situations in this country. (or the UK)

Dr Joel Sherman's medical privacy forum is a wealth of information - see under women's privacy issues the articles listed in the side bar. I'd recommend the Richard DeMay article and research by Angela Raffle. (1000 women need regular screening for 35 years to save ONE woman from cc (BMJ;2003) Commentary: "Why I'll never have another smear test" by Anna Saybourn (online) There are also lots of articles by Heather Dixon and others on the real value of these well-woman exams and the unethical practice of doctors holding BC hostage…

Once informed you're better able to protect yourself from harm and to control every consultation. IMO, doctors are careful and respectful when faced with an informed woman.

Those exams are NOT clinically required for the Pill… I should add women not yet sexually active are excluded from testing in other countries, guidelines calling for ALL women to test from 21, that is BAD medical advice.

Also, women who've had complete hysterectomies for benign conditions should be excluded from testing. One other group often overlooked - women in lifetime mutually monogamous relationships are most unlikely to benefit from testing - their risk of cc is near zero.

Whether you're low or high risk, the risk from this cancer is very small and tiny for low risk women - it is your decision whether you screen and if you do, avoid over-screening and early screening.

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13y ago
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14y ago

Whether pap smears are necessary, depends on whether the cervix is still intact. If the hysterectomy was performed vaginally, a pap smear will no longer be needed. If it was done via a laparoscopic hysterectomy, the cervix will still be intact and regular pap smears are still needed.

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10y ago

For women who still have a cervix, pap smears should continue. If you had a hysterectomy due to abnormal paps, vaginal paps should continue. If you are in neither of those categories, pap smears usually aren't required. Ask your health care provider for advice specific to your situation.

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13y ago

Yes, you can still get cancer in the vaginal canal.

A post-hysterectomy Pap smear is only needed if the surgery was performed for uterine or cervical cancer.

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14y ago

Of course. You can still get cancer in the vaginal canal.

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11y ago

Yes as this test is for cervical cancer so unless you have had cervix removed you are still at risk

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13y ago

Women who have had total hysterectomies including the removal of the cervix do not need Pap tests unless the hysterectomy resulted from cervical cancer.

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11y ago

If Cervix removed then NO. If not Yes definately as pap smears are done to check for cervical cancer.

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13y ago

Yes, you can still get cancer in what is left.

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Q: Should you still have a pap smear after a hysterectomy?
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Related questions

What will happen if no pap smear after hysterectomy?

If you had your cervix removed during hysterectomy, and if the hysterectomy was not done for pap problems, there is no need for pap smear after hysterectomy in most women. Contact your health care provider for advice specific to your situation.


Why a smear test is needed after hystectomy?

A pap smear is required after hysterectomy if the cervix was left intact, or if the hysterectomy was done due to cancer.


A person who has not had a hysterectomy does a pap smear. What shoud a person who has had a partial hysterectomy do?

If you have a cervix after your partial hysterectomy, you should continue to get pap smears. If you don't have a cervix, but a hysterectomy was done for pap problems, you should continue vaginal paps. Otherwise, pap smears aren't normally needed. Contact your health care provider for advice specific to your situation.


If you are a virgin should a pap smear still be recommended?

No


Do you have to have a pap smear if you don't have a uterus?

If you had a hysterectomy due to cervical cancer or pap-related problems, you would still have pap smears of the vaginal cuff, even if you didn't have a cervix. If you had your uterus and cervix removed for other reasons, such as bleeding or fibroids, you can stop pap smears, but should continue annual GYN exams.


Do you need a pap smear following a total hysterectomy?

If the hysterectomy was done for pap related problems, ongoing vaginal paps may be recommended. If the pap was done for other reasons, then ongoing pap smears are not normally recommended. Contact your health care provider for advice specific to your situation.


Do you still have to have smears after total abdominal hysterectomy with right Salpingo-oophorectomy?

If you are talking about a Pap Smear, the answer is yes. Pap smear is a sample of your cervical tissue which is the lower part of your uterus. Bilateral salpingo-opphorectomy is only removing the fallopian tube and ovaries.


Do you need a pap smear after hysterectomy if you are on hormones?

If you still have a cervix, or if your uterus was removed due to pap problems, you may need ongoing pap smears. Otherwise, typically you do not. Contact your health care provider for advice specific to your situation.


If you have had a hysterectomy removed ovaries but left the uterus what would cause an abnormal pap smear?

If you have ovaries removed then this is an oopherectomy. If you have had a hysterectomy then only your uterus would have been taken and cervix left. You would therefore still be at risk of cervical cancer so am glad you are still having pap tests. The abnormal results can be treated with loop diathermy or of course you could have the cervix removed which should have been an option when you had your hysterectomy.


Can you get pregnant with a supracervical hysterectomy?

No. A supracervical hysterectomy is the basic operation as it leaves the cervix in place. The uterus/womb is removed and therefore there is no place for an egg to be fertilised. Youe will still need to have smear/pap tests as you will still be at risk of cervical cancer


Can a pap smear stop you from conceiving?

A pap smear does not affect your fertility. You are as likely to get pregnant after a pap smear as you are before a pap smear.


Can you still get pregnant after a pap smear if you ovulated the same day as the pap?

Yes