Nowadays, some young women in their 20s and 30s are also found to have cervical cancer in outpatient clinics, and it is not uncommon to see “post-80s” and even “post-85s” patients in clinical practice. The incidence of cervical cancer is showing a younger trend and threatening young and middle-aged women. These patients are found to have serious cervical lesions because of irregular bleeding or blood in the leukorrhea or bleeding during intercourse. Therefore, we remind young women that if you have a history of sexual life for more than three years, you should have a cervical cancer examination once a year like married women to avoid delaying the disease. Women who are over 20 years old or have sexual intercourse for more than three years should have cervical smear examination once every three years. Women who are over 65 years old and have normal results of regular screening do not need to have cervical cancer screening. People with high risk characteristics such as genetic family history should start earlier or shorten the screening interval under the advice of professional medical consultation. Women of childbearing age can determine whether they are infected by testing for high-risk HPV virus. If the result is negative, it means that she is not infected with HPV. Once the test results are positive for high-risk HPV, further cervical smears should be performed. Women of childbearing age should not neglect annual gynecological examinations as an important way to detect cervical precancer and cervical cancer, especially for those at high risk of cervical cancer who are consistently infected with high-risk types of HPV. In addition, women of childbearing age should learn to pay attention to the “health alerts” issued by their bodies, which are sometimes “telltale signs” but may hide hidden dangers. If precancerous cervical lesions can be detected at an early stage, there is no need to undergo a disruptive total hysterectomy. A conservative conization procedure to detect cervical precancerous lesions before cervical cancer can save the uterus of young women who have not had children.