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"id": 928960,
"url": "https://info.mzalendo.com/api/v0.1/hansard/entries/928960/?format=api",
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"type": "speech",
"speaker_name": "Nandi CWR, JP",
"speaker_title": "Hon. (Dr.) Tecla Tum",
"speaker": {
"id": 913,
"legal_name": "Tum Tecla Chebet",
"slug": "tum-tecla-chebet"
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"content": "Secondly, all women are at risk of cervical cancer. This disease occurs mostly in women over the age of 30. Human Papilloma Virus is the main cause of cervical cancer. It is a virus that is passed from one person to another during sex. Most sexually active people get HPV at some point in their lives but few women get cervical cancer. Other causes of cervical cancer are intimacy at an early age, multiple sexual partners, sexually transmitted diseases, Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (HIV/AIDS) and cigarette smoking. According to the Information Centre on HPV and Cancer, about 9.1 per cent of women in the general population are estimated to have HPV. Vaccination has emerged as an important element of cancer prevention. Dr. Robinson from Australia, who is a Mayo Clinic practitioner states that vaccination is a miracle. We are talking about an infection that is ambiguous. By the time we are 50 years old, 80 per cent of us will have been infected by HPV. The HPV vaccine is a life changer because too many women who live in poverty die of cervical cancer."
}