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Featured researches published by Janet Bradley.


Salud Publica De Mexico | 2003

Factors affecting utilization of cervical cancer prevention services in low-resource settings

Allison Bingham; Amie Bishop; Patricia S. Coffey; Jennifer L. Winkler; Janet Bradley; Ilana Dzuba; Irene Agurto

Strategies for introducing or strengthening cervical cancer prevention programs must focus on ensuring that appropriate, cost-effective services are available and that women who most need the services will, in fact, use them. This article summarizes the experiences of research projects in Bolivia, Peru, Kenya, South Africa, and Mexico. Factors that affect participation rates in cervical cancer prevention programs are categorized in three sections. The first section describes factors that arise from prevailing sociocultural norms that influence womens views on reproductive health, well being, and notions of illness. The second section discusses factors related to the clinical requirements and the type of service delivery system in which a woman is being asked to participate. The third section discusses factors related to quality of care. Examples of strategies that programs are using to encourage womens participation in cervical cancer prevention services are provided. This paper is available too at: http://www.insp.mx/salud/index.html.


Social Science & Medicine | 2002

Participatory evaluation of reproductive health care quality in developing countries

Janet Bradley; Marcia V Mayfield; Manisha P Mehta; Anatole Rukonge

Participatory approaches are becoming increasingly important in the field of health, and many organizations, governments and donors have recognized the need to increase stakeholder involvement to ensure sustainable and real change. However, commitment to participation is often lacking and participatory processes, if applied, tend to be short-term and discrete, especially in institutional settings. Rarely, for example, are stakeholders involved in long-term monitoring and evaluation activities, due the time-consuming nature of participation, and to perceptions on the part of donors and other decision-makers that participation lacks the rigor and objectivity of external evaluation. This paper describes the strategies used by an international reproductive health organization to collaborate with local stakeholders in a long-term participatory approach to quality improvement, focusing on defining quality of care, identifying problems in health facilities, setting goals and seeking solutions to those problems, tracking changes in quality over time, and feeding this monitoring and evaluation information back into the quality improvement process. The paper also illustrates how greater participation was achieved over time as local stakeholders moved away from traditional models and relationships and started working together to meet their quality improvement goals. The paper argues that participatory techniques are essential if the real needs of clients are to be met through sustained change and continuous quality improvement at the site level.


International Journal of Public Health | 2009

Inequalities in cervical cancer screening in Eastern Europe: perspectives from Bulgaria and Romania

Irina Todorova; Adriana Baban; Anna Alexandrova-Karamanova; Janet Bradley

Objectives:The incidence of cervical cancer in Eastern Europe has been on the rise, in contrast to the reduction in incidence in most countries of Western Europe. The objectives of the paper are to delineate the inequalities in cervical cancer screening in Romania and Bulgaria and identify explanations for these inequalities.Methods:Representative samples of women – 1 099 in Bulgaria and 1 053 in Romania, were interviewed through a structured questionnaire.Results:We found multiple dimensions of inequalities in cervical cancer prevalence and prevention, including disparities in comparison to other countries, disparities due to socioeconomic status, education, residency and ethnicity, as well as differential barriers faced by women in access to screening and in relationships with providers. We identified mediators of the effects of socio-economic status on screening history.Conclusions:The study concludes that the effect of SES on screening is mediated mainly by the structural barriers in accessing the healthcare system, as well as women’s perceptions of the multiple costs of the smear. These conclusions are relevant to the development of national screening programs and health promotion in the two countries.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2005

Involving the community in cervical cancer prevention programs.

Irene Agurto; S. Arrossi; Sarah C. White; Patricia S. Coffey; Ilana Dzuba; Allison Bingham; Janet Bradley; R. Lewis

Underutilization of cervical cancer prevention services by women in the high‐risk age group of 30–60 years can be attributed to health service factors (such as poor availability, poor accessibility, and poor quality of care provided), to womens lack of information, and to cultural and behavioral barriers. The Alliance for Cervical Cancer Prevention (ACCP) partners have been working to identify effective ways to increase womens voluntary participation in prevention programs by testing strategies of community involvement in developing countries. The ACCP experiences include developing community partnerships to listen to and learn from the community, thereby enhancing appropriateness of services; developing culturally appropriate messages and educational materials; making access to high‐quality screening services easier; and identifying effective ways to encourage women and their partners to complete diagnosis and treatment regimens. Cervical cancer prevention programs that use these strategies are more likely to increase demand, ensure follow‐through for treatment, and ultimately reduce disease burden.


Health Care for Women International | 2004

WIDENING THE CERVICAL CANCER SCREENING NET IN A SOUTH AFRICAN TOWNSHIP: WHO ARE THE UNDERSERVED?

Janet Bradley; Liliana Risi; Lynette Denny

Cervical cancer screening services in South Africa have failed to reach the majority of the population and to significantly reduce mortality. A household survey in a predominantly Black African population living in a low-income township on the outskirts of Cape Town was undertaken to ascertain the characteristics of women reporting never having been screened. In our group of 664 representatively sampled women, 45% of women reported having had a cervical screening test. However, in what at first glance appears to be a fairly homogeneous population, there were significant differences in the types of women who access and who do not access cervical smear services. The underserved tend to be the older, poorer, less educated, and unemployed (or working in the informal sector) women. They tend to live in nonpermanent dwellings without a partner, they do not know anyone else who has had a cervical smear, and they have not recently sought care for other ailments, or used contraception. Cervical cancer is a slow-to-develop, eminently preventable disease, and yet opportunistic screening through antenatal and family planning services has failed to reach the women most at risk. Efforts in the future must include targeting older women in health centres where they present for other curative services (diabetes, hypertension). Most importantly, areas of the community with the greatest concentration of marginalized women need to be targeted through peer education and other innovative programs. As the underserved tend to be the poorer and less educated women in the community, we must ensure that messages are culturally relevant and appropriate and have a holistic focus on womens physical, mental, and emotional health.


The European Journal of Contraception & Reproductive Health Care | 2007

Supply and demand challenges to modern contraceptive use in Azerbaijan

Janet Bradley; Nabat Mursagulova; Marianna Nosa; Hannah Searing

Objectivesu2003We conducted a survey of health facilities and household members to determine supply and demand aspects of contraceptive use in Azerbaijan. Methodsu2003In June 2005, we conducted interviews with 758 women and 253 men in a community-based survey in 40 communities in five districts. We also surveyed a sample of health facilities and pharmacies and conducted interviews with key informants. Resultsu2003Both men and women in these communities desire small families, yet significant supply and demand impediments exist. Despite community interest, lack of knowledge of contraception is prevalent. Fear of side effects plays a role in non-use and discontinuation of modern methods, although little opportunity exists for counselling on side effects, since few health workers are trained. An obstacle to use is legislation that only allows contraception to be prescribed by gynaecologists, who are mostly concentrated in the hospitals of urban centres. However, the main handicap to increased use of modern contraception, is insufficient contraceptive supply. Not only is there a lack of method choice nationally, but few of the facilities we surveyed had any contraceptives available. This situation threatens to worsen as the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) retracts commodities funding. Conclusionsu2003The lack of knowledge of modern contraception, lack of trained staff and poor commodity availability signals that much remains to be done for the people of Azerbaijan to achieve their fertility control goals.


Social Science & Medicine | 2006

Providers' constructions of the role of women in cervical cancer screening in Bulgaria and Romania.

Irina Todorova; Adriana Baban; Dina Balabanova; Yulia Panayotova; Janet Bradley


Health Education Research | 2004

Media interventions to increase cervical screening uptake in South Africa: an evaluation study of effectiveness

L. Risi; Jonathan Bindman; Oona M. R. Campbell; J. Imrie; K. Everett; Janet Bradley; Lynette Denny


Diagnostic Cytopathology | 2007

Cervical cancer prevention for all the world's women: New approaches offer opportunities and promise

Thomas C. Wright; Paul D. Blumenthal; Janet Bradley; Lynette Denny; Pulikattil Okkaru Esmy; Kasturi Jayant; Bhagwan M. Nene; Amy E. Pollack; Rajamanickam Rajkumar; Rengaswamy Sankaranarayanan; John W. Sellors; Surendra Shastri; Jacqueline Sherris; Vivien Tsu


Archive | 2005

Cervical cancer screening in Bulgaria: what went wrong with the system after 1989? [Abstract for poster presentation]

Dina Balabanova; Yulia Panayotova; J Georgiev; Irina Todorova; Janet Bradley

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Irene Agurto

Pan American Health Organization

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