Back >

 

Cervical Cancer Screening In Developing Countries

 

Why is it ineffective?

 

The case in Mexico.

Lazcano-Ponce EC; Moss S; Alonso de Ruiz P; Salmeron Castro J; Hernandez Avila M  Cervical cancer screening in developing countries: why is it ineffective? The case of Mexico. Arch Med Res 1999 May-Jun;30(3):240-50  Centro de Investigacion en Salud Poblacional, Instituto Nacional de Salud Publica, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.

 

BACKGROUND: Mexico established a national cervical cancer-screening program in 1974. Despite the implementation of the program, there was a steady mortality trend of 16 per 100,000 women over 15 years.  

 

METHODS: A diagnostic procedure of the pitfalls was applied to the following steps of the screening procedure: Pap sampling quality; cytological diagnosis validity; compliance of women; and determinants of non-participation.  

 

RESULTS: The low effectiveness of screening on cervical cancer is principally due to factors associated with quality and coverage. Pap quality is deficient; 64% of a random sample of specimens lacked endocervical cells. Reading centers presented false negative indices of between 10 and 54%. Women seek screening in a late stage of disease (55% with cervical cancer seek care because they have symptoms). In addition, coverage is low; in women between 15 and 49 years of age in Mexico City, 64.2% have a history of Pap, compared with 30% in rural areas. Knowledge of what the Pap is used for strongly determines the use of screening. In rural areas, only 40% of women are informed about the purpose of the Pap test.  

 

CONCLUSIONS: A proposal to reorganize Mexico's screening program includes the following five main strategies: (a) increased coverage; (b) improved quality control of how cervical smears are taken; (c) better interpretation of Pap tests; (d) guaranteed treatment for those whose tests show abnormalities, and (e) improved follow-up.

Community Community 2nd Annual NCCC Conference Visit our store iGive.com Register with iGive.com and help support our goals NCCC on Facebook NCCC on Myspace