Literature DB >> 31838170

IPVS Policy Statement addressing the burden of HPV disease for Indigenous peoples.

Beverley Lawton1, Margaret Heffernan2, George Wurtak3, Marc Steben4, Pema Lhaki5, Fiona Cram6, Magaly Blas7, Merilyn Hibma8, Anna Adcock9, Kendall Stevenson10, Lisa Whop11, Julia Brotherton12, Suzanne M Garland13.   

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31838170      PMCID: PMC7066203          DOI: 10.1016/j.pvr.2019.100191

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Papillomavirus Res        ISSN: 2405-8521


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The International Papillomavirus Society (IPVS) supports best practice and evidence-based research, strategies, and policies to prevent HPV-related diseases worldwide. With the recent call from the World Health Organization (WHO) to global entities to work towards the elimination of cervical cancer globally as a public health problem, a call supported by IPVS [1], it is vital that principles of equity are central to activity in all countries developing strategies to eliminate cervical cancer as a public health problem. This call for equity is outlined in the related IPVS Policy Statement ‘Equity in cervical cancer prevention for all women’. This statement recognises the unequal burden from cervical cancer and other HPV-related diseases that Indigenous peoples face in many areas of the world. With an estimated 370 million Indigenous peoples in 90 countries globally [2], it is paramount that the HPV research and practice community supports culturally appropriate best practices in research and policy to reduce this burden of disease. This statement outlines the origins of this burden, the fundamental requirement to work with Indigenous peoples to reduce this burden, and makes recommendations for actions.

An inequitable disease burden

Health inequities for Indigenous peoples, including disparities in cervical cancer and other HPV-related diseases, are rooted in systemic disadvantage including reduced access to health care, culturally inappropriate models of health care, lack of support for Indigenous workforce capacity building, and, in many countries, trauma and disenfranchisement due to colonisation and ongoing dispossession from traditional land and practices [[2], [3], [4], [5], [6], [7], [8]]. Cervical cancer, the most common HPV-related cancer, disproportionately affects Indigenous women who often have higher incidence and mortality rates than other women in their regions. In high-income countries such as Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and some regions of the USA, cervical cancer incidence rates are 2–3.5 times greater, and mortality rates 2.5 to 4 times greater among Indigenous populations than non-Indigenous populations [[9], [10], [11], [12]].1 The true extent of the burden of HPV-related cancers among Indigenous peoples, especially in less-resourced regions such as Latin America, is largely unknown and may be substantially under-estimated due to insufficient data collection [2,13]. To answer the WHO call to eliminate cervical cancer, these inequities must be addressed [14].

Best practice and principles in reducing Indigenous health inequities

To achieve equitable health outcomes for Indigenous peoples, strategies are required that consider co-creation of methods and tools, that acknowledge the importance of shared data ownership, and include Indigenous “ways of being, doing, and knowing”, i.e., Indigenous beliefs, practices and knowledge systems; and determinants of ‘responsibility’, ‘relationships’ and ‘respect’ [15]. Indigenous leadership is key to developing prioritisation of research focus and methods leading to solutions that are acceptable, appropriate and sustainable, incorporating the WHO health rights platform and best practice principles [[16], [17], [18], [19]].

Recommendations for action to reduce Indigenous HPV-related health burden

IPVS supports action by IPVS members and stakeholders (healthcare and research communities, research funding bodies, governments and policy makers) to: Acknowledge the fundamental right of Indigenous peoples to equal protection against, and treatment of, HPV-related diseases consistent with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples [18]; Develop meaningful respectful partnerships with Indigenous researchers, leaders and communities to conduct work addressing data quality, policy, program and research development in relation to HPV-related disease and HPV Indigenous workforce capacity development; Ensure that HPV related issues affecting Indigenous people are presented at relevant forums.

Developed by the International Indigenous HPV Alliance (IIHpvA) members

Prof. Beverley Lawton, O.N.Z.M., NZ (IIHpvA Chair); Dr. Margaret Heffernan, O.A.M., Australia (Founding committee member); Dr. George Wurtak, Canada (Founding IIHpvA Chair); Dr. Marc Steben, Canada; Pema Lhaki, Nepal (Founding committee member); Dr. Fiona Cram, NZ (Founding committee member); Dr. Magaly Blas, Peru, Latin America (Founding committee member); A/Prof. Merilyn Hibma, NZ; Ms Anna Adcock, NZ; Dr. Kendall Stevenson, NZ; Dr. Lisa Whop, Australia; Prof. Julia Brotherton, IPVS policy committee; Prof. Suzanne Garland A.O., IPVS policy committee Chair, IPVS Vice-President.
  11 in total

1.  Cervical cancer among Aboriginal women in Canada.

Authors:  Alain A Demers; Erich V Kliewer; Olivia Remes; Jay Onysko; Katherine Dinner; Tom Wong; Gayatri C Jayaraman
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2012-01-16       Impact factor: 8.262

2.  Indigenous ways of knowing: implications for participatory research and community.

Authors:  Patricia A L Cochran; Catherine A Marshall; Carmen Garcia-Downing; Elizabeth Kendall; Doris Cook; Laurie McCubbin; Reva Mariah S Gover
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2007-11-29       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  Cervical cancer incidence and mortality among American Indian and Alaska Native women, 1999-2009.

Authors:  Meg Watson; Vicki Benard; Cheryll Thomas; Annie Brayboy; Roberta Paisano; Thomas Becker
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2014-04-22       Impact factor: 9.308

4.  Towards global elimination of cervical cancer in all groups of women.

Authors:  Lisa J Whop; Joan Cunningham; Gail Garvey; John R Condon
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2019-05       Impact factor: 41.316

5.  Planning cancer control in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Authors:  Paul E Goss; Brittany L Lee; Tanja Badovinac-Crnjevic; Kathrin Strasser-Weippl; Yanin Chavarri-Guerra; Jessica St Louis; Cynthia Villarreal-Garza; Karla Unger-Saldaña; Mayra Ferreyra; Márcio Debiasi; Pedro E R Liedke; Diego Touya; Gustavo Werutsky; Michaela Higgins; Lei Fan; Claudia Vasconcelos; Eduardo Cazap; Carlos Vallejos; Alejandro Mohar; Felicia Knaul; Hector Arreola; Rekha Batura; Silvana Luciani; Richard Sullivan; Dianne Finkelstein; Sergio Simon; Carlos Barrios; Rebecca Kightlinger; Andres Gelrud; Vladimir Bychkovsky; Gilberto Lopes; Stephen Stefani; Marcelo Blaya; Fabiano Hahn Souza; Franklin Santana Santos; Alberto Kaemmerer; Evandro de Azambuja; Andres Felipe Cardona Zorilla; Raul Murillo; Jose Jeronimo; Vivien Tsu; Andre Carvalho; Carlos Ferreira Gil; Cinthya Sternberg; Alfonso Dueñas-Gonzalez; Dennis Sgroi; Mauricio Cuello; Rodrigo Fresco; Rui Manuel Reis; Guiseppe Masera; Raúl Gabús; Raul Ribeiro; Renata Knust; Gustavo Ismael; Eduardo Rosenblatt; Berta Roth; Luisa Villa; Argelia Lara Solares; Marta Ximena Leon; Isabel Torres-Vigil; Alfredo Covarrubias-Gomez; Andrés Hernández; Mariela Bertolino; Gilberto Schwartsmann; Sergio Santillana; Francisco Esteva; Luis Fein; Max Mano; Henry Gomez; Marc Hurlbert; Alessandra Durstine; Gustavo Azenha
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2013-04       Impact factor: 41.316

6.  Measuring cancer in indigenous populations.

Authors:  Diana Sarfati; Gail Garvey; Bridget Robson; Suzanne Moore; Ruth Cunningham; Diana Withrow; Kalinda Griffiths; Nadine R Caron; Freddie Bray
Journal:  Ann Epidemiol       Date:  2018-02-15       Impact factor: 3.797

Review 7.  Disparity in cancer prevention and screening in aboriginal populations: recommendations for action.

Authors:  S Ahmed; R K Shahid; J A Episkenew
Journal:  Curr Oncol       Date:  2015-12       Impact factor: 3.677

8.  Colonial legacy and the experience of First Nations women in cervical cancer screening: a Canadian multi-community study.

Authors:  Pamela Wakewich; Brianne Wood; Crystal Davey; Ashlie Laframboise; Ingeborg Zehbe
Journal:  Crit Public Health       Date:  2016-01-01

9.  Being, knowing, and doing: a phronetic approach to constructing grounded theory with Aboriginal Australian partners.

Authors:  Roxanne Bainbridge; Mary Whiteside; Janya McCalman
Journal:  Qual Health Res       Date:  2012-12-03

10.  IPVS statement moving towards elimination of cervical cancer as a public health problem.

Authors:  S M Garland; A Giuliano; Jml Brotherton; A B Moscicki; M Stanley; A M Kaufmann; N Bhatla; R Sankaranarayanan; J M Palefsky; S de Sanjose
Journal:  Papillomavirus Res       Date:  2018-02-27
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  2 in total

1.  Acceptability of human papillomavirus (HPV) self-sampling among never- and under-screened Indigenous and other minority women: a randomised three-arm community trial in Aotearoa New Zealand.

Authors:  Naomi Brewer; Karen Bartholomew; Jane Grant; Anna Maxwell; Georgina McPherson; Helen Wihongi; Collette Bromhead; Nina Scott; Sue Crengle; Sunia Foliaki; Chris Cunningham; Jeroen Douwes; John D Potter
Journal:  Lancet Reg Health West Pac       Date:  2021-09-07

2.  Working towards a comprehensive understanding of HPV and cervical cancer among Indigenous women: a qualitative systematic review.

Authors:  Sneha Sethi; Brianna Poirier; Karen Canfell; Megan Smith; Gail Garvey; Joanne Hedges; Xiangqun Ju; Lisa M Jamieson
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2021-06-30       Impact factor: 2.692

  2 in total

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