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Abstract Background Cervical cancer remains an important global public health concern. Understanding the factors contributing to a decline in screening uptake in high-income countries is fundamental to improving screening rates. We aimed to identify general practice and patient characteristics related to cervical screening coverage in England between 2013 and 2022. Methods We analyzed a panel of 59 271 General Practice (GP)-years from 7881 GP practices. We applied correlated random effects regression to examine the association between cervical screening uptake and a rich set of GP practice workforce, size, quality and patient characteristics. Results Our results show a decline in overall screening rates from 2013/14 to 2021/22 from 77% to 72%. We find GP workforce and list size characteristics are strongly related to screening rates. An increase in 1 FTE Nurse per 1000 patients is related to a 1.94 percentage point increase in cervical screening rates. GP practices located in more deprived areas have lower screening rates. Conclusions GP workforce and patient characteristics need to be considered by decision-makers to increase screening rates. The implementation of self-sampling screening methods could help address some of the current barriers to screening, including lack of healthcare staff and facilities.

More information Original publication

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1093/pubmed/fdad275

Type

Journal article

Journal

Journal of Public Health

Issue

Journal of Public Health, Volume 46, Issue 1, March 2024, Pages e43–e50,

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Publication Date

26/12/2023

Volume

46

Addresses

This work was supported by NIHR SPCR funding 611.

Keywords

cancer, cervical cancer, ethnic group, income, nurses, public health , medicine, workforce