If cervical cancer is treated early and actively, there is a possibility of long-term survival, with a chance to survive for 40 years or even longer. The survival period of cervical cancer is closely related to the clinical stage, the presence of metastasis, and whether the means of treatment is standardized. If early cervical cancer is treated with effective radical surgery in time, it can even be cured. After surgery, close monitoring of one’s own condition and attention to life conditioning can reduce the recurrence rate or timely treatment of recurrent lesions, which can lead to 40 years of survival against cancer, or even longer. In order to improve the survival rate of cervical cancer, it is recommended that women receive the cervical cancer vaccine as early as possible, and high-risk groups should undergo regular cervical cancer smear screening and HPV testing, so as to diagnose precancerous lesions or early-stage cervical cancer as early as possible and carry out the appropriate treatment.