The exact number of years that cervical squamous carcinoma can live is related to many factors and cannot be generalized, it may be within a few years, or may be decades or even longer. If cervical squamous carcinoma belongs to early stage in situ, it is possible that radiotherapy is not needed after surgery, and such patients have longer survival time if there is no recurrence, and even cure does not affect life expectancy. If advanced cervical cancer patients have pelvic or distant distant metastases, even after radiotherapy, the survival rate is lower, and most patients have a survival period within 5 years. The prognosis of cervical squamous cancer patients with different grades and different metastatic sites also varies greatly, and the specific survival time cannot be fully determined. After the diagnosis of cervical squamous carcinoma is confirmed, it is important to actively cooperate with the treatment plan of doctors and carry out relevant treatments. If it is an early stage patient, surgery should be done urgently. In case of advanced stage patients who cannot have surgery, they must adhere to radiotherapy and possibly targeted therapy in order to improve survival rate.