4.3 Article

Inequalities in Temporal Effects on Cervical Cancer Mortality in States in Different Geographic Regions of Brazil: An Ecological Study

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19095591

Keywords

uterine cervical neoplasms; mortality; age-period-cohort analysis; forecasting; Brazil

Funding

  1. National Scientific and Technological Development [CNPQ-425819/2018-3]
  2. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education (CAPES) [001]

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This study analyzed cervical cancer mortality rates among women in different regions of Brazil and evaluated the impact of a national screening program and improved access to public health services. The findings suggest that health inequities persist in Brazil, particularly in regions with lower socioeconomic development.
Cervical cancer is a public health issue with high disease burden and mortality in Brazil. The objectives of the present study were, firstly, to analyze age, period, and cohort effects on cervical cancer mortality in women 20 years old or older from 1980 to 2019 in the North, South, and Southeast Regions of Brazil; and secondly, to evaluate whether the implementation of a national screening program and the expansion of access to public health services impacted the examined period and reduced the risk of death compared with previous years and among younger cohorts. The effects were estimated by applying Poisson regression models with estimable functions. The highest mortality rate per 100,000 women was found in Amazonas (24.13), and the lowest in Sao Paulo (10.56). A positive gradient was obtained for death rates as women's age increased. The states in the most developed regions (South and Southeast) showed a reduction in the risk of death in the period that followed the implementation of the screening program and in the cohort from the 1960s onwards. The North Region showed a decreased risk of death only in Amapa (2000-2004) and Tocantins (1995-2004; 2010-2019). The findings indicate that health inequities remain in Brazil and suggest that the health system has limitations in terms of decreasing mortality associated with this type of cancer in regions of lower socioeconomic development.

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