2013
DOI: 10.30750/ijpbr.1.3.10
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Comparison Between Pap Smear and Via As Screening For Cervical Lesions

Abstract: Introduction: An important reason for higher cervical cancer incidence in developing countries is lack of effective screening programs like pap smear, aimed at detecting precancerous conditions before they progress to invasive cancer. The potential difficulties in implementing cervical cytology based screening in low-resource settings have prompted the investigation of accuracy of alternative low technology tests such as Visual inspection with acetic acid application [VIA], Visual inspection with acetic acid a… Show more

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“…To do a Pap smear, the doctor requires a speculum, lamp, slide, Ayer's spatula, cytobrush, microscope, a pathologist, and a ≥ 2-week interval until the follow-up visit. With VIA, any trained nurse or physician who is able to use a speculum can do the test [12] . VIA appears to be a useful technique as it is easy to carry out (even for newcomers), does not require much time, and does not need an extensive infrastructure.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To do a Pap smear, the doctor requires a speculum, lamp, slide, Ayer's spatula, cytobrush, microscope, a pathologist, and a ≥ 2-week interval until the follow-up visit. With VIA, any trained nurse or physician who is able to use a speculum can do the test [12] . VIA appears to be a useful technique as it is easy to carry out (even for newcomers), does not require much time, and does not need an extensive infrastructure.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%