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Should I have told my 14 yr old about smear test ?

40 replies

Debbieandeva · 25/06/2015 06:37

Good morning all :), just a quick question as I have a social worker question me on the fact that I have told my 14 year old daughter about smear tests and how important they are , said social worker seemed to think I had done a terrible thing ?? And I was wrong to have told my daughter at all ?, the reason I had told my daughter about smear test is that she was having the HPV vaccine and that she would still have to have the test done when she gets older , do you think I have done the wrong thing as I believe teenage girls should be educated about this now as maybe it will prevent them from getting full blown cervical cancer , any way I would like your views as now I feel like I have been a bad mother telling my daughter this .

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Skiingmaniac · 25/06/2015 06:40

Your telling your daughter about something so important is sensible and highly suitable. Shocked at social worker thinking otherwise! Confused

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Sparklingbrook · 25/06/2015 06:41

Did the SW say why this was so terrible? How did it come up in conversation?

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bakingtins · 25/06/2015 06:43

Of course you weren't unreasonable! It came up n the context of discussing her HPV vaccine and it was completely age appropriate to tell her. I can't think why the SW thought it was wrong??

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Loveleopardprint · 25/06/2015 06:44

I would tell both of my teenage daughters (15 and 12) about smear tests if the subject came up. I don't see any problem with that at all. You are a sensible mother not a bad one!!

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GlitzAndGigglesx · 25/06/2015 06:51

I don't think 14 is too young at all. At 14 the majority are aware of some other types of cancer so why not this too and how it's carried out?

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anotherdayanothersquabble · 25/06/2015 06:56

SW is crazy. Your daughter is expected to make informed consent about the HPV vaccine. In order for her to make informed consent, she needs all of the facts about it. Smear tests are very relevant to a discussion about a vaccine which is targeted against cervical cancer.

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Debbieandeva · 25/06/2015 07:03

This is what I thought too so thank you for sharing the same view as me :)

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Nolim · 25/06/2015 07:07

Why would be a terrible thing to share factual health information??

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Sparklingbrook · 25/06/2015 07:08

I was wondering how it came up in conversation with the SW.

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McFarts · 25/06/2015 07:11

My 12yo Y7 daughter has just learnt about smear tests at school! the SW indeed sounds crazy.

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Groovee · 25/06/2015 07:12

The more awareness teens have of tests like these, should hopefully help then realise they are important and to go. Why did the social worker find out and question you about it?

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Finola1step · 25/06/2015 07:14

I opened this thread expecting to see a "my DD wants to know why I went for a smear test, how much should I tell her?". I was all ready to post that you should tell her why they are so important, that its a routine, regular check that all women should have etc etc. I am gobsmacked that a social worker thinks you shouldn't tell a 14 year old about smear tests.

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ludovica · 25/06/2015 07:14

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meglet · 25/06/2015 07:18

of course a 14 yo should know about smear tests. (Not a parent of a teen but veteran of smear tests)

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nooka · 25/06/2015 07:28

Weird. I have a 14 year old and would have no issue about telling her about smear tests, makes total sense in the context f having her HPV vaccinations. I think I probably told her a year or so ago when I had my last smear test. She recently decided to join a big research project on the HPV vaccine that involves her doing a self swab every year and had no problem with the idea (she signed up on her own).

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NeedAScarfForMyGiraffe · 25/06/2015 07:28

This reply has been deleted

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Debbieandeva · 25/06/2015 07:49

We are going through a parenting assessment at the moment with social services , I won't go into detail but one of the questions I was asked was about sex education of my daughter and told them that I had told her all about it and then I told them that myself and my daughter had had a frank conversation about sexual diseases and the HPV and what it's for and smear testing , but I think social worker thinks it is inappropriate to talk about this to my child at her age !?? I was pretty shocked that they would object so badly to something so very important?? She really made me feel like a really terrible mother for doing such a thing ?.

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ludovica · 25/06/2015 07:54

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MamanOfThree · 25/06/2015 08:01

Well actually, she could well have sex alreadt at that age.
And I beliieve that, in that case, SW think it's good to talk about sexually transmitted disease, how to avoid pg and how to protect yourself Confused

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Bakeoffcake · 25/06/2015 08:03

you did exactly the right thing. I expect lots of mums have been talking to their DDs about this. They have the HPV injection so it's bound to come up.

The SW sounds rather mad to me.

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sooperdooper · 25/06/2015 08:05

The SW is bonkers, I think smear tests should be part of learning about sexual health and 14 is an entirely appropriate age to tell your dd about what they're for and why it's important to have them

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BertrandRussell · 25/06/2015 08:06

"She really made me feel like a really terrible mother for doing such a thing"

What did she actually say?

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WhirlpoolGalaxyM51 · 25/06/2015 08:06

I can't even begin to imagine why sw would have a problem with this. Sounds fine to me and laudable in fact that you will talk to her about things like this a lot of parents don't.

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bloodyteenagers · 25/06/2015 08:13

That Sw would hate us.
We talk about sex, sti's, contraception, different relationships, checking your boobs, bowel movements, smears, urine and a million other body and relationship stuff.
I would rather my kids get this info from me than from their mates.

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BertrandRussell · 25/06/2015 08:48

Oh, I do worry about threads like this. It sounds as if complicated and serious things are going on in the OP's family- and we have got a tiny snippet of it. I do think we need to be incredibly careful what we say. OP- do ask the social worker what her concerns are- if you think she's misrepresenting you do challenge it. Have you got somebody to be to meetings with you?

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