Ndeke Jonas M, Rosenberg Molly, Yeates Karen E, Landsittel Douglas
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Indiana University School of Public Health-Bloomington, Bloomington, Indiana, USA
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Indiana University School of Public Health-Bloomington, Bloomington, Indiana, USA.
BMJ Glob Health. 2025 Aug 27;10(8):e018634. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2024-018634.
To compare cervical cancer screening prevalence between urban and rural women aged 30-49 years in three sub-Saharan African countries chosen by their country-specific screening strategy (Burkina Faso, which has a systematic population-based cervical cancer screening programme in place; Tanzania, where opportunistic screening options only are implemented; and Ghana, which has implemented neither one).
We used the most recent Demographic and Health Surveys data from Burkina Faso, Ghana and Tanzania. We restricted our analysis to women aged 30-49 eligible for cervical cancer screening and categorised them by their place of residence as urban or rural. We calculated screening proportions using country-specific survey weights to estimate the absolute prevalence difference in cervical cancer screening between urban/rural residents.
Rural participants represented 69.5% in Burkina Faso, 64.6% in Tanzania and 42.8% in Ghana. Burkina Faso women reported higher cervical cancer screening prevalence at 19.9%, and Ghana participants reported the lowest at 7.4%. Compared with urban participants, rural women screened less across countries, with an absolute prevalence difference in screening wider in Tanzania at 13.1% (95% CI 10.6% to 15.7%), followed by Burkina Faso at 11.1% (95% CI 7.7% to 14.6%) and narrower in Ghana at 5.9% (95% CI 4.1% to 7.7%).
We found a consistently low screening uptake and a screening prevalence gap disfavouring rural women from these three sub-Saharan African countries, with the narrowest urban/rural gap in Ghana and the widest in Tanzania, which has a large opportunistic cervical cancer screening programme. Our findings offer no indication of a potential benefit of having a systematic screening programme as a tool that can mitigate the screening gap between urban and rural populations. Further screening uptake studies, including more countries, are needed on this topic, which should account for the existing country-specific non-screening related factors in the healthcare system that may influence cervical cancer screening uptake.
比较撒哈拉以南非洲三个国家30至49岁城乡女性的宫颈癌筛查普及率,这三个国家是根据其各自国家的筛查策略选定的(布基纳法索,该国已实施基于人群的系统性宫颈癌筛查计划;坦桑尼亚,该国仅实施机会性筛查;加纳,该国两者均未实施)。
我们使用了布基纳法索、加纳和坦桑尼亚最新的人口与健康调查数据。我们将分析限制在符合宫颈癌筛查条件的30至49岁女性,并按其居住地分为城市或农村。我们使用各国特定的调查权重计算筛查比例,以估计城乡居民宫颈癌筛查的绝对普及率差异。
农村参与者在布基纳法索占69.5%,在坦桑尼亚占64.6%,在加纳占42.8%。布基纳法索女性报告的宫颈癌筛查普及率较高,为19.9%,加纳参与者报告的最低,为7.4%。与城市参与者相比,各国农村女性接受筛查的比例较低,坦桑尼亚筛查的绝对普及率差异最大,为13.1%(95%可信区间为10.6%至15.7%),其次是布基纳法索,为11.1%(95%可信区间为7.7%至14.6%),加纳最小,为5.9%(95%可信区间为4.1%至7.7%)。
我们发现这三个撒哈拉以南非洲国家的筛查接受率一直很低,且筛查普及率存在差距,不利于农村女性,加纳的城乡差距最小,坦桑尼亚最大,该国实施了大型机会性宫颈癌筛查计划。我们的研究结果没有表明系统性筛查计划作为一种可以缩小城乡人群筛查差距的工具具有潜在益处。关于这个主题需要进行更多国家参与的进一步筛查接受情况研究,这应该考虑到医疗保健系统中现有的各国特定的与未筛查相关的因素,这些因素可能会影响宫颈癌筛查的接受情况。