Abstract

BackgroundAlthough most countries in southern Africa have cervical cancer screening programs, these programs generally fail to reach a significant majority of women because they are often implemented as pilot or research projects, and this limits their scope and ability to scale up screening. Some countries have planned larger-scale programs, but these have either never been implemented or have not been successfully scaled up. Most of the global burden of cervical cancer is experienced in countries with limited resources, and mortality from cervical cancer is the most common cause of cancer-related deaths among women in Sub-Saharan Africa.ObjectiveThe purpose of this study is to learn about preferences for cervical cancer screening in Zambia, to identify barriers and facilitators for screening uptake, and to evaluate willingness to pay for screening services to support the scaling up of cervical cancer screening programs.MethodsWe will conduct a discrete choice experiment by interviewing women and men and asking them to choose among constructed scenarios with varying combinations of attributes relevant to cervical cancer screening. To inform the discrete choice experiment, we will conduct focus groups and interviews about general knowledge and attitudes about cervical screening, perception about the availability of screening, stigma associated with cancer and HIV, and payment for health care services. For the discrete choice experiment, we will have a maximum design of 120 choice sets divided into 15 sets of 8 tasks each with a sample size of 320-400 respondents. We will use a hierarchical Bayesian estimation procedure to assess attributes at the following two levels: group and individual levels.ResultsThe model will generate preferences for attributes to assess the most important features and allow for the assessment of differences among cohorts. We will conduct policy simulations reflecting potential changes in the attributes of the screening facilities and calculate the projected changes in preference for choosing to undergo cervical cancer screening. The findings from the discrete choice experiment will be supplemented with interviews, focus groups, and patient surveys to ensure a comprehensive and context-based interpretation of the results.ConclusionsBecause willingness to pay for cervical cancer screening has not been previously assessed, this will be a unique and important contribution to the literature. This study will take into account the high HIV prevalence in Sub-Saharan Africa and prevailing gender attitudes to identify an optimal package of interventions to reduce cervical cancer incidence. This simulation of women’s decisions (and men’s support) to undergo screening will lay the foundation for understanding the stated preferences and willingness to pay to help design future screening programs.Registered Report IdentifierRR1-10.2196/10429

Highlights

  • Around the world, a woman dies of cervical cancer about every 2 minutes [1], with 528,000 new cases and 266,000 deaths in 2012

  • Because willingness to pay for cervical cancer screening has not been previously assessed, this will be a unique and important contribution to the literature

  • This study will take into account the high HIV prevalence in Sub-Saharan Africa and prevailing gender attitudes to identify an optimal package of interventions to reduce cervical cancer incidence

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A woman dies of cervical cancer about every 2 minutes [1], with 528,000 new cases and 266,000 deaths in 2012. A large proportion of the global burden is experienced in countries with limited resources, and mortality from cervical cancer is the most common cause of cancer-related deaths among women in Sub-Saharan Africa [3,4]. Given the advances in HIV/AIDS treatment in Sub-Saharan Africa, women are living longer with HIV, but they are dying from cervical cancer due to the scarcity of large-scale implementation of screening programs. The knowledge and technology base exists to prevent and screen for cervical cancer in low-resource settings and, as in other settings, large-scale sustainable screening programs can be implemented [9,10,11]. Most of the global burden of cervical cancer is experienced in countries with limited resources, and mortality from cervical cancer is the most common cause of cancer-related deaths among women in Sub-Saharan Africa

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call