Cervical cancer screening in the United States and the Netherlands: a tale of two countries.
Abstract
CONTEXT
This article compares cervical cancer screening intensity and cervical cancer mortality trends in the United States and the
Netherlands to illustrate the potential of cross-national comparative studies. We discuss the lessons that can be learned
from the comparison as well as the challenges in each country to effective and efficient screening.
METHODS
We used nationally representative data sources in the United States and the Netherlands to estimate the number of Pap smears
and the cervical cancer mortality rate since 1950. The following questions are addressed: How do differences in intensity
of Pap smear use between the countries translate into differences in mortality trends? Can population coverage rates (the
proportion of eligible women who had a Pap smear within a specified period) explain the mortality trends better than the total
intensity of Pap smear use?
FINDINGS
Even though three to four times more Pap smears per woman were conducted in the United States than in the Netherlands over
a period of three decades, the two countries' mortality trends were quite similar. The five-year coverage rates for women
aged thirty to sixty-four were quite comparable at 80 to 90 percent. Because screening in the Netherlands was limited to ages
thirty to sixty, screening rates for women under thirty and over sixty were much higher in the United States. These differences
had consequences for age-specific mortality trends. The relatively good coverage rate in the Netherlands can be traced back
to a nationwide invitation system based on municipal population registries. While both countries followed a "policy cycle"
involving evidence review, surveillance of screening practices and outcomes, clinical guidelines, and reimbursement policies,
the components of this cycle were more systematically linked and implemented nationwide in the Netherlands than in the United
States. To a large extent, this was facilitated by a public health model of screening in the Netherlands, rather than a medical
services model.
CONCLUSIONS
Cross-country studies like ours are natural experiments that can produce insights not easily obtained from other types of
study. The cervical cancer screening system in the Netherlands seems to have been as effective as the U.S. system but used
much less screening. Adequate coverage of the female population at risk seems to be of central importance.
Links
Authors
Habbema D, De Kok IM, Brown ML
Institution
Erasmus MC University Medical Center.
Source
The Milbank quarterly 90:1 2012 Mar pg 5-37MeSH
AlphapapillomavirusCross-Cultural Comparison
Female
Guidelines as Topic
Health Policy
Humans
Incidence
Mass Screening
Netherlands
Papillomavirus Infections
Physician's Practice Patterns
Population Surveillance
Public Health
United States
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
Vaginal Smears
Pub Type(s)
Comparative StudyJournal Article
Language
eng
PubMed ID
22428690
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