Some doctors are indifferent to the patient’s medical history, contact history, clinical symptoms and signs, and screen for HPV at will. Once low-risk HPV is detected, the patient is diagnosed with condyloma acuminata regardless of whether he has symptoms or not; if high-risk HPV is detected, the patient is told that he will get cervical cancer, and some doctors, after detecting HPV, give the patient excessive anti-viral and so-called immunity-boosting treatments, including infusions, injections, medications, and topical applications. Some doctors, after HPV detection, give patients excessive anti-viral and so-called immunity-boosting treatments, including infusion, injection, medication, local medication and physical therapy, etc., which bring great mental stress to patients and their families and cause huge economic losses. The actual fact is that the HPV test is very limited, not to mention the quality of the test kits (not standardized kits test results will have false positives), even if the regular kits, the detection of low-risk HPV is not the same as having a condyloma, condyloma diagnosis is mainly based on contact history and clinical performance to determine. For people over 30 years old with high risk of cervical cancer (such as family history, long-term oral contraceptive use or radiation exposure, low immunity, combined herpes simplex virus or cytomegalovirus infection, etc.), HPV testing can be performed regularly for follow-up and applied together with routine cytological examination (Pap smear) to improve the sensitivity of cervical cancer screening. sensitivity of cervical cancer screening.