A cervical biopsy is a very small procedure in which a small lesion is taken from the epithelium of the cervix for pathological examination, resulting in a small incision, but the cervix itself has a strong healing capacity and recovers quickly, usually in 3-7 days. If the degree of cervical lesion is light and the tissue is more elastic, the biopsy incision can be almost without obvious bleeding, in this case the cervical biopsy incision will heal faster; if the degree of cervical lesion is heavy and the tissue is brittle, the biopsy incision will bleed easily and needs to be filled with gauze to stop bleeding, if the bleeding cannot be stopped by repeated gauze filling, electrocoagulation can be used to stop bleeding, in this case the cervical biopsy incision will heal more slowly. After cervical biopsy, oral antibiotics can be taken for 3 days to prevent infection, and sexual intercourse and tub bathing should be prohibited for 1 month to avoid infection of the cervical biopsy incision and wait for the cervical biopsy tissue pathology to be shown back before further treatment.