Pam – Interview 23
Pam had CIN1, which progressed to CIN2. After having a LLETZ in 2008, she was diagnosed with CIN3, aged 38.
Pam had her first child at seventeen and a smear test shortly afterwards. Results showed abnormalities and she was given annual cervical screening for about ten years. In 2004, Pam broke her coccyx and, when she received an invitation for cervical screening, she said she ignored it because she was not very mobile. She also had a marriage break-up around that time and said that going for screening was, at that point, not a priority.
Shortly after her marriage break-up, Pam met someone new but, later, found out that he had cheated on her. After they broke up, she went to see her GP because she was concerned that she might have caught an STI (sexually transmitted infection). She was given tests, including cervical screening, and results showed that she had CIN1. The test was repeated six months later and results showed it had progressed to CIN2. Pam was given a colposcopy and biopsy and, in a following appointment, a LLETZ. Results showed she had CIN3.
Pam said she experienced a lot of pain during and after surgery and would have liked more information about CIN, treatment, what would happen at each appointment, and about follow-up. Not having this information, she said, made her experience of CIN3 more worrying than it needed to be.
Pam’s older daughter was 21 at the time of interview and had two children of her own. Pam said that, having had CIN3 herself, she was now concerned about her daughter, who would not be screened until she was 25. Her younger daughter was 14 at the time of interview and Pam was keen for her to have the HPV vaccine. When she made enquiries about it at her daughter’s school, however, she was given very little information.
Pam said she wondered how she got CIN3 and, at first, felt a lot of blame and anger towards her ex-boyfriend. She also worried that she could have cancer. She would now like more information on what can be done tohelp preventa recurrence.