Lifetime Prevalence of Cervical Cancer Screening in 55 Low- and Middle-Income Countries


Journal article


Julia M. Lemp, Jan-Walter De Neve, Hermann Bussmann, Simiao Chen, Jennifer Manne-Goehler, Michaela Theilmann, Maja-Emilia Marcus, Cara Ebert, Charlotte Probst, Lindiwe Tsabedze-Sibanyoni, Lela Sturua, Joseph M. Kibachio, Sahar Saeedi Moghaddam, Joao S. Martins, Dismand Houinato, Corine Houehanou, Mongal S. Gurung, Gladwell Gathecha, Farshad Farzadfar, Scott Dryden-Peterson, Justine I. Davies, Rifat Atun, Sebastian Vollmer, Till Bärnighausen, Pascal Geldsetzer
JAMA, vol. 324, 2020 Oct, p. 1532

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APA   Click to copy
Lemp, J. M., De Neve, J.-W., Bussmann, H., Chen, S., Manne-Goehler, J., Theilmann, M., … Geldsetzer, P. (2020). Lifetime Prevalence of Cervical Cancer Screening in 55 Low- and Middle-Income Countries. JAMA, 324, 1532.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Lemp, Julia M., Jan-Walter De Neve, Hermann Bussmann, Simiao Chen, Jennifer Manne-Goehler, Michaela Theilmann, Maja-Emilia Marcus, et al. “Lifetime Prevalence of Cervical Cancer Screening in 55 Low- and Middle-Income Countries.” JAMA 324 (October 2020): 1532.


MLA   Click to copy
Lemp, Julia M., et al. “Lifetime Prevalence of Cervical Cancer Screening in 55 Low- and Middle-Income Countries.” JAMA, vol. 324, Oct. 2020, p. 1532.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{lemp2020a,
  title = {Lifetime Prevalence of Cervical Cancer Screening in 55 Low- and Middle-Income Countries},
  year = {2020},
  month = oct,
  journal = {JAMA},
  pages = {1532},
  volume = {324},
  author = {Lemp, Julia M. and De Neve, Jan-Walter and Bussmann, Hermann and Chen, Simiao and Manne-Goehler, Jennifer and Theilmann, Michaela and Marcus, Maja-Emilia and Ebert, Cara and Probst, Charlotte and Tsabedze-Sibanyoni, Lindiwe and Sturua, Lela and Kibachio, Joseph M. and Moghaddam, Sahar Saeedi and Martins, Joao S. and Houinato, Dismand and Houehanou, Corine and Gurung, Mongal S. and Gathecha, Gladwell and Farzadfar, Farshad and Dryden-Peterson, Scott and Davies, Justine I. and Atun, Rifat and Vollmer, Sebastian and Bärnighausen, Till and Geldsetzer, Pascal},
  month_numeric = {10}
}

Abstract

Importance
The World Health Organization is developing a global strategy to eliminate cervical cancer, with goals for screening prevalence among women aged 30 through 49 years. However, evidence on prevalence levels of cervical cancer screening in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is sparse.
Objective
To determine lifetime cervical cancer screening prevalence in LMICs and its variation across and within world regions and countries.
Design, Setting, and Participants
Analysis of cross-sectional nationally representative household surveys carried out in 55 LMICs from 2005 through 2018. The median response rate across surveys was 93.8% (range, 64.0%-99.3%). The population-based sample consisted of 1 136 289 women aged 15 years or older, of whom 6885 (0.6%) had missing information for the survey question on cervical cancer screening.
Exposures
World region, country; countries’ economic, social, and health system characteristics; and individuals’ sociodemographic characteristics.
Main Outcomes and Measures
Self-report of having ever had a screening test for cervical cancer.
Results
Of the 1 129 404 women included in the analysis, 542 475 were aged 30 through 49 years. A country-level median of 43.6% (interquartile range [IQR], 13.9%-77.3%; range, 0.3%-97.4%) of women aged 30 through 49 years self-reported to have ever been screened, with countries in Latin America and the Caribbean having the highest prevalence (country-level median, 84.6%; IQR, 65.7%-91.1%; range, 11.7%-97.4%) and those in sub-Saharan Africa the lowest prevalence (country-level median, 16.9%; IQR, 3.7%-31.0%; range, 0.9%-50.8%). There was large variation in the self-reported lifetime prevalence of cervical cancer screening among countries within regions and among countries with similar levels of per capita gross domestic product and total health expenditure. Within countries, women who lived in rural areas, had low educational attainment, or had low household wealth were generally least likely to self-report ever having been screened.
Conclusions and Relevance 
In this cross-sectional study of data collected in 55 low- and middle-income countries from 2005 through 2018, there was wide variation between countries in the self-reported lifetime prevalence of cervical cancer screening. However, the median prevalence was only 44%, supporting the need to increase the rate of screening.

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