Abstract:
Cervical cancer is largely preventable through early detection, but screening uptake remains
low among black women in South Africa. The purpose of this study was to determine the
prevalence and factors associated with cervical cancer screening in the past 10 years
among black African women in primary health care (PHC) clinics, in Gauteng Province,
South Africa. This was a cross-sectional study involving 672 consecutively recruited black
women at cervical cancer screening programs in PHC clinics between 2017 and 2020. An
interviewer-administered questionnaire covered socio-demographics, HIV status, sexual
history, cervical cancer risk factors knowledge, and screening behaviours in the past 10
years. The mean age of participants was 38 years. More than half (63%) were aged 30–49
years. Most completed high school education (75%), were unemployed (61%), single
(60%), and HIV positive (48%). Only 285 (42.4%) of participants reported screening for cervical
cancer in the past 10 years. Of participants that reported receiving information on
screening, 27.6% (n = 176) and 13.97% (n = 89) did so from healthcare facilities and community
platforms respectively. Participants aged 30 years or more were more likely to report
for cervical cancer screening as compared to other categories in the past 10 years. The
study found low cervical cancer screening prevalence. This calls for health education campaigns
and prevention strategies that would target individual patients’ contexts and stages
of behavioral change. Such strategies must also consider socio-demographic and clinical
correlates of cervical cancer screening and promote better integration into PHC services in
South Africa.
Description:
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : Our ethics agreement with participants was that the data would only be accessible to the study team due to the sensitive information contained in the data; hence, it would compromise the HREC ethical standards to allow the data to be publicly available in a public repository, within the manuscript itself or uploaded as supplementary information. We are happy to share the data, or parts of the data, on a case-by case basis.