Cervical cancer

Maritza Blandón, a coffee grower in the mountains of Nicaragua, got her first pap smear at the age of 47. She tested posted for HPV and get treatment. Blandón is a single mother. If she died of cervical cancer, no one would be here to take care of her eig

Nicaragua has a cervical cancer problem. A coffee farm is trying to help.

Health

Nicaragua has the highest cervical cancer death rate in the Americas —and women must face down societal pressure even to get treated.Nicaragua has the highest cervical cancer death rate in the Americas —and women must face down societal pressure even to get treated.

Osman Chandab in Melbourne, Australia contracted whooping cough before getting vaccinated.

No matter where in the world you are, opting out of childhood vaccines can be a catastrophic choice

Health

Infographic: Cervical Cancer’s Toll in the Developing World

Health & Medicine
Global Cancer Map

Interactive Feature: Global Cancer Map

Health & Medicine

Cancer’s New Battleground: Infectious diseases a leading cancer cause

Health & Medicine

Cancer’s New Battleground: In India, a simple test of vinegar makes all the difference

Health & Medicine

Thousands of women die of cervical cancer each year in the developing world. In large part, it’s because they don’t have access to tests like the Pap smear. But a new test, one that merely involves conventional vinegar, is changing everything.

Cancer’s New Battleground: In Uganda, Jackson Orem fighting to establish cancer care

Health & Medicine

Cancer’s viewed by many as a disease of the developed world. Alternately, it’s viewed as too hard or too expensive to prevent or treat. But often, those views simply aren’t true. In Uganda, Dr. Jackson Orem, the country’s first, and for a time only, cancer doctor is showing the way.

A medical team at Tata Memorial Hospital.

Part III: An Ounce of Prevention

Health & Medicine

Cervical cancer is far more common in the developing world than in the US. One reason: women in the US receive routine screening that catches it in its earliest stages. A low-cost test being rolled out in India could save tens of thousands of lives.

A young Burkitt's lymphoma patient.

Part IV: The Infectious Connection

Health & Medicine

Cancer can be triggered by infectious diseases, especially in impoverished parts of the world. Scientists in the US and Africa are working to unravel how viruses and bacteria cause malignancies.

The World

Health screening recommendations causing anger, confusion among women

Health & Medicine

Dr. Andrea Price, an OBGYN, says some of her patients are confused and dismayed by these new recommendations from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force and the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology. We hear what she recommends.