More new guidelines, less screening:
New guidelines for cervical cancer screening say women should delay their first Pap test until age 21, and be screened less often than recommended in the past.
The advice, from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, is meant to decrease unnecessary testing and potentially harmful treatment, particularly in teenagers and young women. The group’s previous guidelines had recommended yearly testing for young women, starting within three years of their first sexual intercourse, but no later than age 21.
Data will drive the discussion eventually. Politics will drive the discussion now. Publication of the guidelines generally decides the timing of these announcements (not the WH) and there's often a six month lag between submission and publication, and a longer time frame for panel discussion and research.
But the timing was coincidental, said Dr. Cheryl B. Iglesia, the chairwoman of a panel in the obstetricians’ group that developed the Pap smear guidelines. The group updates its advice regularly based on new medical information, and Dr. Iglesia said the latest recommendations had been in the works for several years, "long before the Obama health plan came into existence."
She called the timing crazy, uncanny and "an unfortunate perfect storm," adding, "There’s no political agenda with regard to these recommendations."
Why the change?
"A review of the evidence to date shows that screening at less frequent intervals prevents cervical cancer just as well, has decreased costs and avoids unnecessary interventions that could be harmful," said Dr. Alan G. Waxman, a professor at the University of New Mexico who directed the process.
Note that this was a non-governmental panel of clinical and academic experts.