Following the call from the WHO Director General in 2018, in August 2020, the World Health Assembly passed a resolution calling for elimination of cervical cancer and adopting a strategy to make it happen.
The Global Strategy outlines the following threshold: we will have eliminated cervical cancer as a public health problem when all countries reach an incidence rate of less than 4 cases per 100 000 women. This should happen within the lifetime of today’s young girls.
It has three main pillars: prevent, screen and treat, that capture a comprehensive approach that includes prevention, effective screening and treatment of pre-cancerous lesions, early cancer diagnosis and programmes for the management of invasive cancer.
Impact
Globally in 2022, 661,021 new cases, and 348,189 women died from cervical cancer.
More than 85% of these deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries.
To reach elimination, efforts must be aligned and accelerated
Every country must reach the following global targets by 2030:
90% coverage of HPV Vaccination of girls (by 15 years of age)
70% coverage of screening (70% of women are screened with high-performance tests by the ages of 35 and 45 years)
90% treatment of precancerous lesions and Management of 90% of invasive cancer cases
Analysis of the situation of cervical cancer in the Region of the Americas (in Spanish)
Executive summary (in English)
VIDEOS
Cervical Cancer screening and treatment:
Cervical Cancer vaccine:
Cervical Cancer elimination:
Women and girls - It´s time to end cervical cancer
Girls in Tarija receive the HPV vaccine