CERVICAL CANCER

Cervical Cancer

Directions

Review the clinician provider guidelines and recommendations found at:

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality [AHRQ]. (2014). Guide to clinical preventive services. Retrieved from: https://www.ahrq.gov/professionals/clinicians-providers/guidelines-recommendations/guide/index.html

and also at:

The guide to clinical preventive services. (2014, May). Recommendations of the U.S. preventive services task force. Retrieved from https://www.ahrq.gov/sites/default/files/wysiwyg/professionals/clinicians-providers/guidelines-recommendations/guide/cpsguide.pdf

For the MSN prepared nurse, knowledge of epidemiology and its application to preventive screening guidelines is important in many clinical areas; administrative, informatics, education and nurse practitioner fields. Consider you are working in a clinic and need to order a preventive screening on a patient forCervical Cancer. (While this is a preventative measure, it also can be a diagnostic tool in other circumstances. For this Assignment the screening is a secondary prevention measure.)

Your screening methodology must come from the National Clearinghouse guidelines.

This Assignment must have all the following characteristics:

Condition and type of screening methodology is clearly defined.
National Clearinghouse guidelines are identified and are relevant to the screening methodology.
Provides appropriate literature support, derived from nursing scholarly journals and other social science literature, as evidence for their chosen screening. Discussion demonstrates critical analysis of strengths and weaknesses of Cervical Cancer screening methodology.
Provides 4 or more scholarly sources for literature support.
Methodology is properly applied to a specific population.

Explain the guideline, the correct application of the screening, and the epidemiology behind the guidance. Content required should include epidemiologic data such as statistical information as available ex. morbidity, mortality, incidence and prevalence of condition. Identify risk factors, risk assessment, testing interval, description of the patient population, screening test recommendations and other factors relative to the guideline.

 

 

 

Answer preview

Screening guidelines for Cervical Cancer

Cervical Cancer is a condition which affects the uterine cervix and begins with the lower end of the uterus and spreads to the upper part of the vagina causing discomfort and pain to the affected person. The cervical cancer is hard to notice and affects most of the women aged 21 years and above. The appropriate guidelines for screening cervical cancer have been formulated, and the first one necessitates that screening should be done every three to the women of age between 21 and 65. Regular testing is paramount because early detection results in better treatment and containment of cancer from spreading to other parts of the cervix….

 

(1000 words)

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