Best practices in cervical screening programmes: Audit of cancers, legal and ethical frameworks, communication, and workforce competencies
- PMID: 38048411
- Bookshelf ID: NBK597778
Best practices in cervical screening programmes: Audit of cancers, legal and ethical frameworks, communication, and workforce competencies
Excerpt
Cervical cancer is a significant public health challenge globally, and cervical screening programmes play a crucial role in the prevention and early detection of this disease. Well organized cervical screening programmes have been shown to reduce the incidence of and mortality from cervical cancer at the population level. The development of best practices for cervical screening programmes is critical to ensure that these programmes are effective, efficient, and safe for all participants.
The recommendations in this publication are the outcomes of the deliberations of three Technical Working Groups of global experts. The publication describes current best practices in the following aspects of a cervical screening programme: conducting an audit of cervical cancers; establishing legal and ethical frameworks to safeguard the interests of screening participants, health professionals, and programme managers associated with cervical screening; developing a strategy for effective and transparent communication with target populations and other stakeholders about the benefits, risks, and limitations of cervical screening; and establishing a framework for developing workforce competencies in communication.
This document will provide a valuable resource for practitioners and researchers working in cervical screening programmes and will help to ensure that these programmes operate in a safe and effective manner.
© International Agency for Research on Cancer, 2023. For more information contact publications@iarc.fr.
Sections
- Contributors
- Gender language disclaimer
- Foreword
- Executive summary
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Objectives and scope of this document
- Chapter 1. Audit of cervical cancers in a screening programme
- Chapter 2. Legal and ethical frameworks to safeguard the interests of cervical screening participants, health professionals, and programme managers associated with cervical screening and related services
- Chapter 3. Effective and transparent communication with target populations and other stakeholders
- Chapter 4. Development of workforce competencies in communication about cervical screening
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Annex 1. Members of the Technical Working Groups
- Disclosures of interests
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