Fiche publication


Date publication

avril 2024

Journal

Health policy (Amsterdam, Netherlands)

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr BARDOU Marc


Tous les auteurs :
Rigby S, Greenley R, Uuskula A, Tisler A, Suurna M, Jesse M, Bardou M, McKee M,

Résumé

Estonia has one of the highest death rates from cervical cancer in the European Union despite having had a population-based screening programme for over 15 years. In 2021, this high disease burden, alongside a new national cancer prevention plan, prompted a series of cervical cancer screening programme reforms to address low screening uptake and evidence of variable screening test quality. The reforms had three main elements: expansion of eligibility to all women aged 30-65 regardless of insurance status; increasing test provision by enabling family physicians to take screening samples and introducing self-sampling; and improving testing procedures, replacing cytology with HPV testing as the primary screening test. Although the impact of these changes is yet to be seen, early signs suggest increased programme participation. However, at 51 %, further action to address barriers to uptake will likely be necessary. If Estonia is to avoid another period of policy dormancy, as happened between 2006 and 2021, greater clarity on screening programme accountability is required. The establishment of the National Cancer Screening Group may enable this. The first test will be the delivery of an end-to-end evaluation of the reformed programme, with an emphasis on equity of access. The next step will be to develop and deliver solutions that respond to these needs.

Mots clés

Cervical cancer, Estonia, Health policy, Healthcare access, Public health, Screening

Référence

Health Policy. 2024 04 24;144:105077