Screening Saves Lives: Overcoming Barriers to Cervical Cancer Prevention
What can be done to address the decline in cervical cancer screening rates among Hispanic individuals since the COVID-19 pandemic? Dr. Abigail Zamorano of McGovern Medical School at UT Health Houston discusses the impact of reduced screenings, shares resources available for those struggling to access care, and offers practical guidance on where patients can turn for preventive services, including free and low-cost screening programs.
[ACT]IVATION TIP
“If you don’t have a provider that you see regularly, ask your family and friends for recommendations. Look at options online, reach out to community centers, and check with your county health department. Organizations like the American Cancer Society and the Foundation for Women’s Cancer can also help connect you with screening programs.”
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Transcript:
Lisa Hatfield:
Dr. Zamorano, your research highlights the significant decline in cervical cancer screening rates among Hispanic individuals during the COVID-19 pandemic and then the limited rebound in subsequent years. For Hispanic patients who may have missed their cervical cancer screening during the pandemic or are having trouble getting screened now, what advice and resources would you recommend to help them get the preventive care they need and where can they find support in their communities?
Dr. Abigail Zamorano:
Right. We did see a decrease in cervical cancer screening rates among Hispanic individuals during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. And, unfortunately, screening rates have not increased sufficiently in that population since the height of the pandemic to cover the decreases that we saw.
So this means that Hispanic individuals are now being screened at even lower rates than they were before the pandemic. I encourage all individuals with a cervix to get back to routine health evaluations, including cervical cancer screening. For screening, you can go to a g`eneral OB-GYN or gynecologist, sometimes even some PCPs, internal medicine or family medicine providers can do cervical cancer screening. So you can always ask.
I tell patients though, if you’re having trouble finding a place or location, a provider to see you, you can start by asking friends and family if they have any recommendations and then also look for screening programs in your community. A lot of communities hold cancer screening events or clinics that are accessible to all despite insurance status. And so that’s a great way of finding a place.
For example, I am the director of the Houston PAP Project, which is a no cost cervical cancer screening program in Houston. We see primarily uninsured Hispanic individuals in the greater Houston area, and we hold our clinics on Saturday mornings. I do say that the important thing about screening is also managing abnormal results. A screen is only as good as management of an abnormal screen, because it’s those abnormal screens that we can then provide treatment for to help prevent the development of any cancer.
So one of the things that we do in the Houston PAP Project is we not only do the cervical cancer screening, but we also do the follow-up evaluations and treatment to try to prevent as many cervical cancers as we possibly can. To do this, we provide a lot of education and counseling to patients because we understand that this process can be very scary. It is scary because it’s, you know, seeing a provider having a pelvic exam.
It’s also scary because people are worried about what they, what might be found. They’re worried about the fact that they might have a pre-cancer or a cancer. And so we provide a lot of counseling to help guide patients so that they can help overcome that barrier. We also ask patients about their social determinants of health to determine if there’s additional barriers that are keeping them from accessing either their cervical cancer screening, their pre-cancer management, diagnosis, and treatment, or if there are things that are preventing them from otherwise accessing routine health care.
So all of these are incorporated into the clinic that we run. But we are not necessarily unique. There’s programs like ours across the state, across the country. And so I encourage patients to look into what resources might be available.
My [ACT]IVATION tip for this is for patients to get back into screening. If you don’t have a provider that you see regularly, ask your family and friends for recommendations. Look at options online, Reach out to community centers. Sometimes your county health department can have options. Also look for different resources online through the American Cancer Society or Foundation for Women’s Cancer. Sometimes you can find even some cancer prevention and screening programs through those.