Abstract

The World Health Organization (WHO) refers to cervical cancer as a public health problem, and sub‐Saharan Africa bears the world's highest incidence. In the realm of screening, simplified WHO recommendations for low‐resource countries now present an opportunity for a public health approach to this public health problem. We evaluated the feasibility of such a public health approach to cervical cancer screening that features community‐based self‐administered HPV testing and mobile treatment provision. In two rural districts of western‐central Uganda, Village Health Team members led community mobilization for cervical cancer screening fairs in their communities, which offered self‐collection of vaginal samples for high‐risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) testing. High‐risk human papillomavirus‐positive women were re‐contacted and referred for treatment with cryotherapy by a mobile treatment unit in their community. We also determined penetrance of the mobilization campaign message by interviewing a probability sample of adult women in study communities about the fair and their attendance. In 16 communities, 2142 women attended the health fairs; 1902 were eligible for cervical cancer screening of which 1892 (99.5%) provided a self‐collected vaginal sample. Among the 393 (21%) women with detectable hrHPV, 89% were successfully contacted about their results, of which 86% returned for treatment by a mobile treatment team. Most of the women in the community (93%) reported hearing about the fair, and among those who had heard of the fair, 68% attended. This public health approach to cervical cancer screening was feasible, effectively penetrated the communities, and was readily accepted by community women. The findings support further optimization and evaluation of this approach as a means of scaling up cervical cancer control in low‐resource settings.

Highlights

  • Resource-limited regions bear the brunt of the burden of cervical cancer incidence and mortality worldwide

  • We evaluated the feasibility and acceptability of a cervical cancer screening program consisting of Village Health Team Member (VHTM)-delivered community mobilization, selfcollection of vaginal samples for human papillomavirus (HPV) testing, and community-based mobile treatment for HPV-infected women in two rural districts of Uganda

  • Of the 393 women who were positive for high-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV), 350 (89%; 95% CI: 86% to 92%) were notified, while 884 (59%; 95% CI: 56% to 61%) of the 1,499 hrHPV-negative women were notified

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Resource-limited regions bear the brunt of the burden of cervical cancer incidence and mortality worldwide. The prevalence of having been screened was 4.8% in one recent report from rural Uganda.[4] While human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination has received a significant amount of public health attention and funding as the most cost-effective means to cervical cancer control, slow roll-out and an exclusive focus on adolescent girls in low-resource settings mean that screening programs will remain essential to cervical cancer prevention in these populations for the foreseeable future. To address the public health problem of cervical cancer in sub-Saharan Africa, we sought to take advantage of the technologic advancements in HPV testing and couple them with practical insights (eg, mobile treatment provision) to develop a community-based “public health approach” to screening. We term this a public health approach because.

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| Result notification
| RESULTS
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| DISCUSSION
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