首页> 外文期刊>BMC International Health and Human Rights >Universal cervical cancer control through a right to health lens: refocusing national policy and programmes on underserved women
【24h】

Universal cervical cancer control through a right to health lens: refocusing national policy and programmes on underserved women

机译:通用宫颈癌通过卫生镜头的权利:重新剖足国家政策和方案对服务不足的妇女

获取原文
           

摘要

Cervical cancer claims 311,000 lives annually, and 90% of these deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries. Cervical cancer is a highly preventable and treatable disease, if detected through screening at an early stage. Governments have a responsibility to screen women for precancerous cervical lesions. Yet, national screening programmes overlook many poor women and those marginalised in society. Under-screened women (called hard-to-reach) experience a higher incidence of cervical cancer and elevated mortality rates compared to regularly-screened women. Such inequalities deprive hard-to-reach women of the full enjoyment of their right to sexual and reproductive health, as laid out in Article 12 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and General Comment No. 22. This article argues first for tailored and innovative national cervical cancer screening programmes (NCSP) grounded in human rights law, to close the disparity between women who are afforded screening and those who are not. Second, acknowledging socioeconomic disparities requires governments to adopt and refine universal cancer control through NCSPs aligned with human rights duties, including to reach all eligible women. Commonly reported- and chronically under-addressed- screening disparities relate to the availability of sufficient health facilities and human resources (example from Kenya), the physical accessibility of health services for rural and remote populations (example from Brazil), and the accessibility of information sensitive to cultural, ethnic, and linguistic barriers (example from Ecuador). Third, governments can adopt new technologies to overcome individual and structural barriers to cervical cancer screening. National cervical cancer screening programmes should tailor screening methods to under-screened women, bearing in mind that eliminating systemic discrimination may require committing greater resources to traditionally neglected groups. Governments have human rights obligations to refocus screening policies and programmes on women who are disproportionately affected by discrimination that impairs their full enjoyment of the right to sexual and reproductive health. National cervical cancer screening programmes that keep the right to health principles (above) central will be able to expand screening among low-income, isolated and other marginalised populations, but also women in general, who, for a variety of reasons, do not visit healthcare providers for regular screenings.
机译:宫颈癌每年411万生命,其中90%的死亡发生在低收入和中等收入国家。如果通过在早期阶段通过筛选检测,宫颈癌是一种高度可预防和可治疗的疾病。政府有责任筛查女性患有癌前宫颈病变。然而,国家筛查计划忽视了许多贫困妇女和社会边缘化的妇女。与定期筛选的妇女相比,筛选的妇女(呼吁难以达到)经历宫颈癌的发病率高,并提高了死亡率。这种不平等剥夺了难以达到的妇女充分享受他们的性交和生殖健康权,如经济,社会,文化权利国际公约第12条所列的第22章第12号。本文首先争辩对于定制和创新的国家宫颈癌筛查计划(NCSP)基于人权法,以揭示妇女与筛选的差距以及那些不是。其次,承认社会经济差异要求政府通过与人权职责对齐的NCSP采用和改进普遍癌症控制,包括达到所有合格的妇女。常见的报告和慢性制的筛选差异涉及足够的卫生设施和人力资源(肯尼亚的示例)的可用性,农村和远程群体的健康服务的身体无障碍(来自巴西的示例)以及信息的可访问性对文化,种族和语言障碍敏感(来自厄瓜多尔的议程)。第三,政府可以采用新技术来克服宫颈癌筛查的个体和结构障碍。国家宫颈癌筛查计划应根据筛查的妇女定制筛查方法,记住,消除系统性歧视可能要求更大的资源到传统忽视的群体。政府有人权义务,向妇女的筛选政策和方案对被歧视的歧视的妇女进行重新聚焦,以损害其充分享受性和生殖健康权的充分享受。国家宫颈癌筛查计划,以保持健康原则(上文)中央的筛选计划将能够扩展低收入,孤立和其他边缘化人口中的筛查,而且还有一般的女性,由于各种原因,谁不去参观医疗保健提供者进行常规放映。

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号