In seven health districts in southern England, an audit of the management of cervical cancer compared with regionally developed guidelines was undertaken between 1988 and 1991. Four hundred and sixty-nine regional residents were treated in the study district hospitals. 73(15.6%) women were appropriately staged, with increasing likelihood of appropriate staging investigations observed with higher stages (P <0.0001) and type of hospital [Teaching 23(21%), Non-Teaching with oncology support 11(11.5%), Non-teaching 4(7%), P <0.0001] but with no change over the study period. There was no significant trend in the proportion of women treated appropriately over time, with 270(59%) being appropriately treated, 91(20%) under-treated and 98(21%) over-treated overall. Appropriateness of treatment increased with higher stages (P <0.0001) and hospital workload for cancer of the cervix (P=0.038). Multivariable analysis indicated that survival independently and significantly decreased with age and stage, under-treatment and in cases where lymph nodes were involved or not examined. There was no change in the appropriateness of management over the 4 years, with high levels of inappropriate care. Survival was not only influenced by biological and demographic factors, but by inappropriate care. Copyright (C) 1996 Elsevier Science Ltd.