Nairobi County in deal with US medical tech company BD to advance cervical cancer care
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American multinational medical technology
company BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company) has partnered with the Nairobi County
Health Ministry to launch a large-scale mobilisation of women for Human
Papillomavirus (HPV) screening using BD's newly FDA-approved self-collection
technology.
In collaboration with the Ministry of
Health (MoH), the National Cancer Institute of Kenya (NCI-K), the Nairobi
County Government, and Healthstrat, this initiative seeks to raise awareness
and improve access to cervical cancer screening for women in Nairobi,
particularly in marginalised and underserved communities where the disease
burden is highest.
It aims to transform cervical
cancer prevention in Kenya by empowering women to self-screen in a private,
safe, and convenient setting, breaking down long-standing barriers to access.
The success of this mobilisation relies on
the efforts of over 700 community health promoters (CHPs) who support MoH’s
broader Universal Health Coverage (UHC) goals.
“By working with community health promoters,
we continue to ensure that women can access the kits and crucial information to
fight cervical cancer. Our mandate is to partner in executing the Ministry's
strategy, focusing on early detection and capacity building across the
healthcare system,” Healthstrat CEO Andrew Nyandigisi said.
Irene Muchoki, Chief Officer of Medical
Services for Nairobi County said, “This is a significant milestone
in the fight to eliminate cervical cancer in Nairobi and Kenya at large. The
role of CHPs in reaching vulnerable populations is crucial to achieving
Universal Health Coverage and addressing health inequities in urban and
rural areas.”
“This HPV self-screening mobilisation marks
an important step in the ongoing efforts to reduce cervical cancer mortality
rates and the cancer burden in Kenya and highlights the importance of
partnerships between private sector innovators and government health bodies in
tackling the country's most pressing healthcare challenges,” added Caitlin
Asjes, BD's Senior Global Director for Public Health.
According to the NCI-K, cervical cancer is
the leading cause of cancer-related deaths among women in Kenya, with an
estimated 3,211 deaths annually.
Globally, cervical cancer claims the lives
of over 341,000 women every year, 90 per cent of those deaths occurring in low- and
lower-middle-income countries like Kenya.
Despite the availability of effective
screening methods, efforts to combat the disease in vulnerable populations have
been hindered by cultural stigmas, limited access to healthcare professionals,
and infrastructural challenges.
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