Household vinegar to detect cervical cancer
Household vinegar could help thwart cervical cancer deaths in poor areas, researchers say.
Annually, more than 250,000 women die from cervical cancer worldwide; 85 per cent of which are in poor or middle-class areas.
According to The New York Times, these countries are often unable to afford the high-quality labs that Pap smear tests require, so they need cheaper-but still effective-medical techniques to diagnose cervical cancer.
A procedure developed by Johns Hopkins Medical School in the 1990s, but supported by the World Health Organization in 2010, has doctors brush vinegar on a woman's cervix, which makes precancerous spots turn white.
They are then able to freeze off the spots with metal rods cooled by carbon dioxide, a more affordable alternative to liquid nitrogen. The procedure is 90 percent effective.
Doctors and nurses there are beginning to switch from Pap smears to cryotherapy, but it is too early to know if they have decreased their cancer rates.
"Some doctors resist the cryotherapy approach," Fox News quoted Dr. Wachara Eamratsameekool, a gynecologist at rural Roi Et Hospital, who helped pioneer the procedure, as saying.
"They call it 'poor care for poor people. This is a misunderstanding. It's the most effective use of our resources," he added.
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timesofindia.indiatimes.com/life-style/health-fitness/health/Household-vinegar-to-detect-cervical-cancer/articleshow/10196526.cms
Annually, more than 250,000 women die from cervical cancer worldwide; 85 per cent of which are in poor or middle-class areas.
According to The New York Times, these countries are often unable to afford the high-quality labs that Pap smear tests require, so they need cheaper-but still effective-medical techniques to diagnose cervical cancer.
A procedure developed by Johns Hopkins Medical School in the 1990s, but supported by the World Health Organization in 2010, has doctors brush vinegar on a woman's cervix, which makes precancerous spots turn white.
They are then able to freeze off the spots with metal rods cooled by carbon dioxide, a more affordable alternative to liquid nitrogen. The procedure is 90 percent effective.
Doctors and nurses there are beginning to switch from Pap smears to cryotherapy, but it is too early to know if they have decreased their cancer rates.
"Some doctors resist the cryotherapy approach," Fox News quoted Dr. Wachara Eamratsameekool, a gynecologist at rural Roi Et Hospital, who helped pioneer the procedure, as saying.
"They call it 'poor care for poor people. This is a misunderstanding. It's the most effective use of our resources," he added.
================================================
timesofindia.indiatimes.com/life-style/health-fitness/health/Household-vinegar-to-detect-cervical-cancer/articleshow/10196526.cms
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