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Woman's Hour

Kim Cattrall, Sex offender treatment, At-home cervical screening, Author Sarah Pearse

Woman's Hour

BBC

Society & Culture, Health & Fitness, Personal Journals

4.22.9K Ratings

🗓️ 17 September 2024

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The actress Kim Cattrall has starred in films and on stage, but is probably best known for TV series Sex And The City. She is now in a new audio drama, Central Intelligence, which tells the story of the CIA from the perspective of Eloise Page. Eloise joined on the agency’s first day in 1947 and became the highest ranking female officer. Kim joins Clare McDonnell to discuss Eloise, her passion for radio, and the enduring appeal of Samantha Jones.

In sentencing Huw Edwards, the former BBC News presenter, for accessing child sexual abuse images, the magistrate said that he did not pose a risk to the public or children, and that an immediate custodial sentence was not necessary because the evidence showed he could be rehabilitated. Edwards must now attend 25 sex offender treatment sessions. We look at how these treatment programmes work and how effective they are proven to be, with Deborah Denis, CEO of the Lucy Faithfull Foundation and Professor Belinda Winder, Research Director of the Centre for Crime, Offending, Prevention and Engagement at Nottingham Trent University.

The number of women taking up NHS cervical screening test invitations has been declining for the last 20 years. Healthwatch England did research with women who were reluctant to accept NHS invitations for screening and found that 73% would do an at-home test instead. A trial done by King’s College London earlier this year found that if self-sample kits were available on the NHS, 400,000 more women would be screened per year. Chief Executive of Healthwatch England Louise Ansari and Dr Anita Lim, lead investigator of the King’s College London trial, join Clare to tell us more.

Sarah Pearse is the best-selling author of the Detective Elin Warner trilogy. She recently released the last novel in the series, The Wilds which includes themes of coercive control and was written with advice from the charity Refuge. She talks to Clare about the role fiction can play in highlighting issues of domestic violence and coercive control.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Before this BBC podcast kicks off, I'd like to tell you about some others you might enjoy.

0:05.0

My name's Will Wilkin and I Commission Music Podcast for the BBC.

0:08.0

It's a really cool job, but every day we get to tell the incredible stories behind songs, moments and movements,

0:14.7

stories of struggle and success, rises and falls, the funny, the ridiculous.

0:19.1

And the BBC's position at the heart of British music means we can tell those stories like no one else.

0:24.6

We were, are and always will be right there at the center of the narrative.

0:28.6

So whether you want an insightful take on music right now or a nostalgic deep dive into some of the most famous and

0:34.4

infamous moments in music check out the music podcasts on BBC Sounds.

0:38.6

BBC Sounds music radio podcasts.

0:44.0

Hello, this is Claire McDonnell and you're listening to the Woman's Hour podcast.

0:49.2

Hello, welcome to Woman's Hour with me Claire McDonnell.

0:53.4

The judge sentencing Hugh Edwards, the now disgraced BBC news presenter for accessing child

0:59.7

sexual abuse images, said that he did not pose a risk to the public or children and

1:05.3

that an immediate custodial sentence was not necessary because the evidence showed

1:10.3

he could be rehabilitated. Edwards must now attend 25 sex offender

1:15.9

treatment sessions. Today a woman's hour we will look at how these treatment

1:19.7

programs work and ask how effective they have proven to be.

1:25.0

If you could do your own smear test at home, would you be more likely to have one?

1:30.0

L. H.S. show that last year a third of eligible women under the age of 50

1:37.1

did not take up their appointments.

1:39.9

This morning we're going to hear from the woman who led a major at-home self-sampling

1:44.0

program and she says this new approach could result in more than 400,000 extra women,

...

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