Bøje Rikke Buus, Bardou Marc, Mensah Keitly, Rico Berrocal Raquel, Bonvicini Laura, Iorio Giusy, Auzzi Noemi, Taut Diana, Pașca Nicoleta-Monica, Tisler Anna, Reintamm Kerli, Uusküla Anneli, Teixeira Margarida, Firmino-Machado João, Amorim Mariana, Baia Ines, Lunet Nuno, Panayotova Yulia, Kotzeva Tatyana, Todorova Irina, Andersen Berit, Kirkegaard Pia
University Research Clinic for Cancer Screening, Randers Regional Hospital, Randers, Denmark
CIC-P INSERM 1432, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Dijon, Dijon, France.
BMJ Open. 2025 Jan 25;15(1):e090631. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-090631.
This study explored and compared stakeholder perspectives on enhancements to cervical cancer screening for vulnerable women across seven European countries.
In a series of Collaborative User Boards, stakeholders were invited to collaborate on identifying facilitators to improve cervical cancer screening.
This study was part of the CBIG-SCREEN project which is funded by the European Union and targets disparities in cervical cancer screening for vulnerable women (www.cbig-screen.eu). Data collection took place in Bulgaria, Denmark, Estonia, France, Italy, Portugal and Romania.
Represented stakeholders at various levels, including user representatives (vulnerable women), healthcare professionals, social workers, programme managers and decision makers.
14 meetings lasting 2 hours each were held in these seven countries between October 2021 and June 2022. The meetings were audio or video recorded, transcribed and translated into English for qualitative framework analysis.
We engaged 120 participants in the Collaborative User Boards. Proposed solutions targeted both provider and system levels. In all countries, fostering trusting relationships between vulnerable women and social or healthcare professionals, coupled with community outreach for awareness and access to testing was a consistent recommendation. Participants in Estonia, Denmark, France, Italy, Portugal and Romania advocated for tailoring healthcare services to meet the unique needs of vulnerable populations through a holistic approach. In Bulgaria and Romania, participants advocated for the need to secure free access, from screening to follow-up, and emphasised the need for organised screening with target population screening registries.
The study offers insights into stakeholders' recommendations for enhancing cervical cancer screening services for vulnerable women across seven European countries. Despite variations in the implementation level of population-based screening programmes, the imperative to optimise outreach and proximity work to improve cervical cancer screening resonated across all countries.
本研究探讨并比较了七个欧洲国家的利益相关者对改善弱势女性宫颈癌筛查的看法。
在一系列协作用户委员会中,邀请利益相关者共同确定促进宫颈癌筛查的因素。
本研究是由欧盟资助的CBIG-SCREEN项目的一部分,该项目旨在解决弱势女性宫颈癌筛查方面的差异(www.cbig-screen.eu)。数据收集在保加利亚、丹麦、爱沙尼亚、法国、意大利、葡萄牙和罗马尼亚进行。
代表了各级利益相关者,包括用户代表(弱势女性)、医疗保健专业人员、社会工作者、项目经理和决策者。
2021年10月至2022年6月期间,在这七个国家举行了14次会议,每次会议持续2小时。会议进行了音频或视频记录、转录并翻译成英文,用于定性框架分析。
我们让120名参与者参与了协作用户委员会。提出的解决方案针对提供者和系统层面。在所有国家,促进弱势女性与社会或医疗保健专业人员之间的信任关系,以及通过社区宣传提高意识和增加检测机会,是一致的建议。爱沙尼亚、丹麦、法国、意大利、葡萄牙和罗马尼亚的参与者主张通过整体方法调整医疗服务,以满足弱势群体的独特需求。在保加利亚和罗马尼亚,参与者主张需要确保从筛查到后续跟进的免费服务,并强调需要通过目标人群筛查登记进行有组织的筛查。
该研究提供了关于七个欧洲国家利益相关者对改善弱势女性宫颈癌筛查服务的建议的见解。尽管基于人群的筛查计划的实施水平存在差异,但优化外展和近距离工作以改善宫颈癌筛查的必要性在所有国家都引起了共鸣。