Displaying all 4 publications

Abstract:
Sort:
  1. Rehman IU, Khan TM
    Disaster Med Public Health Prep, 2016 08;10(4):539-40.
    PMID: 27263952 DOI: 10.1017/dmp.2016.91
    Matched MeSH terms: Disease Eradication/organization & administration*
  2. Garland SM, Stanley MA, Giuliano AR, Moscicki AB, Kaufmann A, Bhatla N, et al.
    Papillomavirus Res, 2020 Jun;9:100195.
    PMID: 32205196 DOI: 10.1016/j.pvr.2020.100195
    Matched MeSH terms: Disease Eradication/organization & administration*
  3. Wkly. Epidemiol. Rec., 2017 09 29;92(39):578-86.
    PMID: 28960948
    Matched MeSH terms: Disease Eradication/organization & administration*
  4. Keane A, Ng CW, Simms KT, Nguyen D, Woo YL, Saville M, et al.
    Int J Cancer, 2021 12 15;149(12):1997-2009.
    PMID: 34363620 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.33759
    The WHO has launched a global strategy to eliminate cervical cancer through the scale-up of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination, cervical screening, and cervical cancer treatment. Malaysia has achieved high-coverage HPV vaccination since 2010, but coverage of the existing cytology-based program remains low. Pilot studies found HPV self-sampling was acceptable and effective, with high follow-up rates when a digital registry was used, and recently the Malaysian Government announced plans for a national HPV-based screening program. We therefore evaluated the impact of primary HPV screening with self-collection in Malaysia in the context of Malaysia's existing vaccination program. We used the "Policy1-Cervix" modeling platform to assess health outcomes, cost-effectiveness, resource use and cervical cancer elimination timing (the year when cervical cancer rates reach four cases per 100 000 women) of implementing primary HPV testing with self-collection, assuming 70% routine-screening coverage could be achieved. Based on available data, we assumed that compliance with follow-up was 90% when a digital registry was used, but that compliance with follow-up would be 50-75% without the use of a digital registry. We found that the current vaccination program would prevent 27 000 to 32 200 cervical cancer cases and 11 700 to 14 000 deaths by 2070. HPV testing with a digital registry was cost-effective (CER = $US 6953-7549 
    Matched MeSH terms: Disease Eradication/organization & administration*
Filters
Contact Us

Please provide feedback to Administrator ([email protected])

External Links