Back to Search Start Over

Universal cervical cancer control through a right to health lens: refocusing national policy and programmes on underserved women

Authors :
Perehudoff, Katrina
Vermandere, Heleen
Williams, Alex
Bautista Arredondo, Sergio
De Paepe, Elien
Dias, Sonia
Gama, Ana
Keygnaert, Ines
Longatto Filho, Adhemar
Ortiz Segarra, Jose Ignacio
Padalko, Elizaveta
Reis, Rui Manuel
Vanderheijden, Nathalie
Vega Crespo, Bernardo Jose
Verberckmoes, Bo
Degomme, Olivier
Perehudoff, Katrina
Vermandere, Heleen
Williams, Alex
Bautista Arredondo, Sergio
De Paepe, Elien
Dias, Sonia
Gama, Ana
Keygnaert, Ines
Longatto Filho, Adhemar
Ortiz Segarra, Jose Ignacio
Padalko, Elizaveta
Reis, Rui Manuel
Vanderheijden, Nathalie
Vega Crespo, Bernardo Jose
Verberckmoes, Bo
Degomme, Olivier
Source :
BMC International Health and Human Rights
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Cervical cancer claims 311,000 lives annually, and 90% of these deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries. Cervical cancer is a highly preventable and treatable disease, if detected through screening at an early stage. Governments have a responsibility to screen women for precancerous cervical lesions. Yet, national screening programmes overlook many poor women and those marginalised in society. Under-screened women (called hard-to-reach) experience a higher incidence of cervical cancer and elevated mortality rates compared to regularly-screened women. Such inequalities deprive hard-to-reach women of the full enjoyment of their right to sexual and reproductive health, as laid out in Article 12 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and General Comment No. 22. Discussion: This article argues first for tailored and innovative national cervical cancer screening programmes (NCSP) grounded in human rights law, to close the disparity between women who are afforded screening and those who are not. Second, acknowledging socioeconomic disparities requires governments to adopt and refine universal cancer control through NCSPs aligned with human rights duties, including to reach all eligible women. Commonly reported- and chronically under-addressed- screening disparities relate to the availability of sufficient health facilities and human resources (example from Kenya), the physical accessibility of health services for rural and remote populations (example from Brazil), and the accessibility of information sensitive to cultural, ethnic, and linguistic barriers (example from Ecuador). Third, governments can adopt new technologies to overcome individual and structural barriers to cervical cancer screening. National cervical cancer screening programmes should tailor screening methods to under-screened women, bearing in mind that eliminating systemic discrimination may require committing greater resources to traditionally neglected

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
BMC International Health and Human Rights
Notes :
es_ES
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1257704613
Document Type :
Electronic Resource