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Originally published September 5, 2017
Last updated July 21, 2025
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You go to your dentist twice a year, your general practitioner annually, make it to your dermatologist for your yearly skin checkup 鈥 and you were equally diligent about making it to your gynecologist. But now, various new recommendations have left you confused about whether an annual appointment is a necessity or not. And, the truth is, there鈥檚 not one right answer for all women.
First things first 鈥 you should see your gynecologist regularly, if:
The (ACOG) currently recommends:
And, it doesn鈥檛 have to be your gynecologist that performs these tests.
鈥淕eneral well-woman exams, including Pap and HPV testing, can be done by your primary care doctor,鈥 says Sharon Orrange, MD, a primary care physician with Keck Signature Care, part of 喵咪社区. 鈥淕enerally, your routine gynecologic care (mammography, Pap smear and HPV co-testing) can be handled by your internist or family medicine doctor, so there is no need to visit a gynecologist, unless your primary doctor refers you for abnormalities (abnormal Pap smear or postmenopausal bleeding), or you are having active issues not addressed by your primary care doctor.鈥
Here鈥檚 where the confusion comes in. The says that for asymptomatic, nonpregnant adult women who are not at increased risk for any specific gynecologic condition, the current evidence is insufficient to recommend screening pelvic examinations for the early detection and treatment of a range of gynecologic conditions.
So, does this mean if you鈥檙e a healthy, monogamous woman, who is not trying to get pregnant, that you can forgo the pelvic exam and annual visit, when you鈥檙e not due for any screening tests?
Not necessarily. AGOG issued a practice advisory that stressed that the Task Force findings were not a recommendation against regular pelvic exams and that 鈥渋t does NOT mean that women should forgo seeing an obstetrician-gynecologist at least once a year for well-woman care. This preventive service visit also provides an opportunity for shared decision-making, wherein the patient and her obstetrician-gynecologist discuss whether a pelvic examination is appropriate for her.鈥
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