To receive important alerts and updates from Gold Coast Primary Health Network, please submit the form below.
To receive important alerts and updates from Gold Coast Primary Health Network, please submit the form below.
This correspondence is being sent using a staged approach, prioritising letters to women who are most overdue. From early January 2019, the volume of these letters will increase until early-February 2019 to address a backlog, after which time normal mail distribution volumes will resume.
Some healthcare providers may experience an increase in patient enquiries and requests for cervical screening tests during this period. Women should be reassured by their cervical screening test providers that while it is recommended that asymptomatic women aged 25-74 years undergoing routine screening have their first Human Papillomavirus (HPV)-based screening test two years after their last Pap test, the risk from delaying their test for a few months is extremely low.
If you are unsure of your patient’s cervical screening history or status, or have any questions relating to participant and healthcare provider correspondence, please call the National Cancer Screening Register Contact Centre team on 1800 627 701 (between 8am and 6pm, Monday to Friday, in all Australian state and territory time zones) or visit the National Cancer Screening Register website.
The National Cancer Screening Register (NCSR) is pleased to announce the launch of the new NCSR website, which has made the content easier to navigate, read and understand. The NCSR supports the National Bowel Cancer Screening Program and the National Cervical Screening Program. The NCSR invites and...
Cervical cancer is one of the most preventable cancers. Over 70 per cent of people who get cervical cancer in Australia have never been screened or haven’t been screened regularly, so your best protection is to have regular Cervical Screening Tests once every five years – even if you’ve had th...
Together we can #MakeCervicalCancerHistory – will you help? Under the National Cervical Screening Program, all participants can choose to screen using either a self-collected vaginal sample or a healthcare provider-collected sample from the cervix. Recent evidence shows a Cervical Screening Test u...
Watch GCPHN Primary Sense team show how Primary Sense can assist practices Identify patients without evidence of bowel and/or breast cancer screening.
So we can provide you with the most accurate information,
please tell us a little more about yourself