Assessing differences in healthcare access by HIV status to inform cervical cancer and HIV screening in rural Uganda.

Uganda has one of the highest incidence rates of cervical cancer in the world. Although this impacts all women, women living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) experience an increased risk for developing cervical cancer. This study aims to compare how HIV-positive and HIV-negative women in a re...

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Main Authors: Mia Sheehan, Hallie Dau, Maryam AboMoslim, Priscilla Naguti, Nelly Mwandacha, Amy Booth, Candice Ruck, Laurie Smith, Jackson Orem, Gina Ogilvie, Carolyn Nakisige
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLOS Global Public Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0003918
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author Mia Sheehan
Hallie Dau
Maryam AboMoslim
Priscilla Naguti
Nelly Mwandacha
Amy Booth
Candice Ruck
Laurie Smith
Jackson Orem
Gina Ogilvie
Carolyn Nakisige
author_facet Mia Sheehan
Hallie Dau
Maryam AboMoslim
Priscilla Naguti
Nelly Mwandacha
Amy Booth
Candice Ruck
Laurie Smith
Jackson Orem
Gina Ogilvie
Carolyn Nakisige
author_sort Mia Sheehan
collection DOAJ
description Uganda has one of the highest incidence rates of cervical cancer in the world. Although this impacts all women, women living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) experience an increased risk for developing cervical cancer. This study aims to compare how HIV-positive and HIV-negative women in a remote sub-county in Uganda access health services to inform consideration of potential HIV and HPV-based cervical cancer screening integration at the community level. Women were recruited for this cross-sectional study door-to-door by village health teams if they had no prior screening or treatment of cervical cancer, no previous hysterectomy, were 30-49 years old residents of the South Busoga District Reserve, and could provide verbal informed consent. Participants completed a baseline survey, which included questions on HIV status, demographics, prior health history, past healthcare access and services recieved. The data was analyzed using bivariate descriptive statistics. Among the 1437 participants included in the analysis, 8.8% were HIV-positive. The majority of the respondents were between 30-34 years of age, were married, had received primary education or higher, and were farmers. The majority of women in both groups had accessed outreach visits (HIV-positive = 89.0%, HIV-negative = 85.8%) and health centres (HIV-positive = 96.1%, HIV-negative = 80.2%). The most commonly received services among both groups of women at outreach visits and health centres were immunization and antenatal care, respectively. Our study demonstrated that there were no significant differences in healthcare access between HIV-positive and HIV-negative women in rural Uganda. Additionally, the high usage of healthcare services by women living with HIV suggests that the integration of cervical cancer and HIV screening may facilitate early detection and prevention of cervical cancer among this population. This can reduce the burden of disease in Uganda and further contribute to the World Health Organization's initiative to eradicate cervical cancer.
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spelling doaj-art-d11eaa2803cd4552bec6cec9e40722de2025-08-20T02:45:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLOS Global Public Health2767-33752025-01-0157e000391810.1371/journal.pgph.0003918Assessing differences in healthcare access by HIV status to inform cervical cancer and HIV screening in rural Uganda.Mia SheehanHallie DauMaryam AboMoslimPriscilla NagutiNelly MwandachaAmy BoothCandice RuckLaurie SmithJackson OremGina OgilvieCarolyn NakisigeUganda has one of the highest incidence rates of cervical cancer in the world. Although this impacts all women, women living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) experience an increased risk for developing cervical cancer. This study aims to compare how HIV-positive and HIV-negative women in a remote sub-county in Uganda access health services to inform consideration of potential HIV and HPV-based cervical cancer screening integration at the community level. Women were recruited for this cross-sectional study door-to-door by village health teams if they had no prior screening or treatment of cervical cancer, no previous hysterectomy, were 30-49 years old residents of the South Busoga District Reserve, and could provide verbal informed consent. Participants completed a baseline survey, which included questions on HIV status, demographics, prior health history, past healthcare access and services recieved. The data was analyzed using bivariate descriptive statistics. Among the 1437 participants included in the analysis, 8.8% were HIV-positive. The majority of the respondents were between 30-34 years of age, were married, had received primary education or higher, and were farmers. The majority of women in both groups had accessed outreach visits (HIV-positive = 89.0%, HIV-negative = 85.8%) and health centres (HIV-positive = 96.1%, HIV-negative = 80.2%). The most commonly received services among both groups of women at outreach visits and health centres were immunization and antenatal care, respectively. Our study demonstrated that there were no significant differences in healthcare access between HIV-positive and HIV-negative women in rural Uganda. Additionally, the high usage of healthcare services by women living with HIV suggests that the integration of cervical cancer and HIV screening may facilitate early detection and prevention of cervical cancer among this population. This can reduce the burden of disease in Uganda and further contribute to the World Health Organization's initiative to eradicate cervical cancer.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0003918
spellingShingle Mia Sheehan
Hallie Dau
Maryam AboMoslim
Priscilla Naguti
Nelly Mwandacha
Amy Booth
Candice Ruck
Laurie Smith
Jackson Orem
Gina Ogilvie
Carolyn Nakisige
Assessing differences in healthcare access by HIV status to inform cervical cancer and HIV screening in rural Uganda.
PLOS Global Public Health
title Assessing differences in healthcare access by HIV status to inform cervical cancer and HIV screening in rural Uganda.
title_full Assessing differences in healthcare access by HIV status to inform cervical cancer and HIV screening in rural Uganda.
title_fullStr Assessing differences in healthcare access by HIV status to inform cervical cancer and HIV screening in rural Uganda.
title_full_unstemmed Assessing differences in healthcare access by HIV status to inform cervical cancer and HIV screening in rural Uganda.
title_short Assessing differences in healthcare access by HIV status to inform cervical cancer and HIV screening in rural Uganda.
title_sort assessing differences in healthcare access by hiv status to inform cervical cancer and hiv screening in rural uganda
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0003918
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