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The effect of nonscreening smears on screening smear results: a statistical analysis with its implications for the NHS cervical screening programme
Author(s) -
Rice S.,
Slater D. N.,
Hewer E. M.
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
cytopathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.512
H-Index - 48
eISSN - 1365-2303
pISSN - 0956-5507
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2303.2000.00240.x
Subject(s) - workload , medicine , cervical screening , statistical analysis , pap smears , statistical significance , gynecology , statistics , cervical cancer , mathematics , computer science , cancer , operating system
The effect of nonscreening smears on screening smear results: a statistical analysis with its implications for the NHS cervical screening programme This is a statistical analysis of individual NHS Cervical Screening Programme laboratories screening smear ‘pick‐up’ rates (defined here as percentage low grade and percentage high grade of total adequate smears for ages 20–64 years derived from general practitioners and community clinics) in relation to their nonscreening smear workload proportion (here defined as percentage nonscreening smears of total laboratory workload from all sources for all ages). This was achieved by the use of three one way anova models in order to receive a complete overview of the results. The models were applied to the following: (1) Laboratories with a total workload of less than 15 000 general practitioner (GP) and community clinic smears; (2) laboratories with a total workload of greater than 15000 GP and community smears and; (3) all laboratories (i.e. a combination of 1 and 2). The ‘test’ groups within each of these models comprised three subgroups based on the percentage of laboratory workload that consisted of smears from a nonscreening source. This figure ranged from 2.8% to 82.6%. The subgroups were divided so as to contain approximately the same number of laboratories in each one (172 laboratories in total, 42 with workload < 15000 and 130 with > 15000). The results show that laboratories high and low grade pick‐up rates have a positively correlated but variable relationship with the proportion of their workload that consists of nonscreening smears. The results show significance overall at the 5% level for high grade and the 10% level for low grade (high grade at P = 0.045 and low grade at P = 0.071). Significance for laboratories viewing less than 15000 screening smears at the 1% level (high grade P = 0.006 and low grade P = 0.005). They show no significance, however, for laboratories viewing more than 15000 screening smears (high grade P = 0.457 and low grade P = 0.622). There is an intriguing possibility that a greater exposure to abnormal smears results in a greater tendency to detect them. The current data provides no evidence to support the NHS Executive's use of 15000 as a designated figure when quality monitoring and service provision becomes a specific issue. The closure or amalgamation of laboratories with workloads less than this would appear to have no scientific evidence base.

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