WHO says woman dies from cervical cancer every 2 minutes

By Anjali Sharma
UNITED NATIONS – World health agency on Friday said that cervical cancer, the fourth most common cancer, a woman dies every 2 minutes globally.

WHO underscored that the illness is both preventable and curable as in January each year, the agency holds Cancer Awareness Month.

Cervical cancer is a reproductive cancer that develops in a woman’s cervix and can spread to other parts of the body if not detected or treated early.

According to WHO in 2022, an estimated 660,000 women were diagnosed with cervical cancer worldwide and about 350,000 women died from the disease.

UNICEF warned that the illness takes away a woman’s life every two minutes.

It said that almost all cervical cancer cases are linked to infection with human papillomaviruses an extremely common virus transmitted through sexual contact.

Most sexually active people will have HPV at some point. In most cases, the immune system clears the virus naturally but persistent infection with certain carcinogenic types of HPV can cause abnormal cell growth that may ultimately develop into cancer.

Cervical cancer is both preventable and curable with proper access to screening, vaccination and treatment.

WHO recommended vaccination for HPV for all girls aged 9–14, before they become sexually active and cervical screening from the age of 30 (25 years for women living with HIV).

It is one of the most successfully treatable forms of cancer when diagnosed, if it is detected early and managed effectively.

Unequal access to prevention and treatment, however, remains a problem, leading to higher rates of incidence and mortality in some regions of the world like sub-Saharan Africa, Central America and Southeast Asia.

In 2020, 194 countries initiated a global strategy with the goal of eliminating cervical cancer. The day it was launched, 17 November, now marks World Cervical Cancer Elimination Day.

The strategy sets three targets to be achieved by 2030:90 per cent of girls to be fully vaccinated for HPV by age 15.

Some 70% of women to be screened with a high-performance test by age 35 and at 45.

WHO stated that 70% of women diagnosed to receive treatment.

The strategy estimates that succeeding in eliminating cervical cancer could avert 74 million new cases and prevent 62 million deaths by 2120.