SHAWN BIGGERS, MD: We actually do the pap smear when you come for an annual visit. It is done by placing a speculum in the vagina, locating the cervix, and then scraping a small layer of cells off the cervix and also the inner part of the cervix. We then place those cells on a slide, which is then sent off to the lab, and is read by doctors or technicians at the lab.
CHERYL WILLS: Dr. Golden, some women have a misconception that a pap smear is painful. For some reason people think "needle" or "injection." That's not at all the case, is it?
FLAVIA GOLDEN, MD: That's absolutely not the case. I would say that the pap smear, generally, in addition to being a very, very quick test, taking perhaps no more than a couple of minutes, is at worst a little bit uncomfortable. Very occasionally, for women who perhaps are very, very uncomfortable, perhaps more apprehensive to begin with, there might be a little bit more discomfort. But, generally speaking, it's not painful at all.
CHERYL WILLS: Dr. Biggers, how important is this test? You must always remind your patients to make sure they get this test. How important is it?
SHAWN BIGGERS, MD: It's tremendously important. When this test was first established in the 1950s, and it was actually quite an innovative discovery, where we could just scrape some cells off of the surface of tissue and actually use that as a screening test for cancer, that was actually a pretty innovative technique. Actually developed at Cornell Medical College.