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Home - Medicine - A roadmap to eliminate cervical cancer in Indigenous Australia

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A roadmap to eliminate cervical cancer in Indigenous Australia

Last updated: February 4, 2026 4:49 pm
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A roadmap to eliminate cervical cancer in Indigenous Australia

A modelling study published in The Lancet Public Health examines the path to eliminating cervical cancer among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women in Australia. The research indicates that urgent, effective action to improve culturally safe access to screening and follow-up care could markedly accelerate the timeline for achieving elimination in this population. The findings underscore that current inequities in healthcare access are a critical barrier, and targeted, community-sensitive interventions are required to close the gap.

Why it might matter to you:
This study directly models the impact of improving system-level access, a core concern of implementation science. It provides a quantitative evidence base for the potential gains of community-driven, culturally safe health service redesign. For a researcher focused on community-engaged design, it highlights a concrete case where modelling can inform priority-setting and strategy for equitable public health interventions.


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