How new at-home HPV test kits could help Alabama fight cervical cancer

 1680725522 
1747630800

The Food and Drug Administration has approved the country’s first at-home HPV screening kit. That disease causes nearly all cervical cancers. The Alabama Department of Public Health (ADPH) reports Alabama is consistently among the top five states for rates of cervical cancer. While some hope the new kits might turn things around, others have questions.

The new kits, made by Teal Health, come with a swab for collecting vaginal samples, which are then mailed to a lab for screening. Right now, the self-testing kits are only available for use on site at a clinic. And while currently the at-home kits are only being used in California, Alabama officials anticipate that will change.

“HPV self-testing is something that we have been hoping for for a while,” Nancy Wright said. 

Wright is the director of ADPH’s Cancer Prevention and Control Division and leader of the state’s Operation Wipeout Cervical Cancer. She noted the kits were approved as potential alternatives to pap smears, which are widely considered uncomfortable and even painful.

“Often embarrassment and discomfort are barriers,” Wright said. “And then, even more importantly, in some of our rural areas, it’s very difficult to get access to that cervical cancer screening and access to care.”

Wright said she hopes the kits will help Alabama not only bring down high cervical cancer rates, but also reach its goal to eliminate cervical cancer entirely by 2034, despite its healthcare deserts. 

“We can stop it to where our children and our grandchildren won’t even know what it is,” Wright said. “And we can do this within my lifetime.” 

Others see the kits bringing further challenges.

“The thing I’m concerned about is the backstream and downstream sort of management of an abnormal test,” Dr. Warner Huh, chair of UAB’s Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, said. 

He said the at-home kits should be simple to use and studies have shown the results will be accurate. But he questions what happens if a test returns abnormal results. 

“Where do they go?” Huh said. “Who sees them? Who’s gonna cover those costs potentially?”

Huh said he does not know for sure if the state can handle evaluating and treating those patients. 

“I don’t want people to fall through the cracks knowing that they had an abnormal test and they A, couldn’t see somebody, or B, that there wasn’t someone potentially following up on those results,” Huh said. 

He added that treatment is just as important to reducing cervical cancer rates as screening. 

 

Crew of fatal US military crash included Alabama father recently deployed

The six U.S. service members who died in the crash of a U.S. military refueling aircraft included an Alabama father who had just been promoted and deployed. The U.S. government released the identities of the deceased service members Saturday.

Alabama poised to drastically overhaul utility regulation. Will it lower electric bills?

The Alabama Senate unanimously voted to expand the public service commission, and create a Secretary of Energy to address rising electricity prices. A bill in the House would go even further, requiring rate case hearings and limiting utility profits.

Musher from Alabama is going for back-to-back Iditarod wins

Riches and paid appearances haven’t followed Jessie Holmes since he won the world’s most famous sled dog race, the Iditarod, last year. He doesn't mind.

Bill would move Alabama to closed primaries

Right now, any Alabama voter can participate in a primary election. Lawmakers in Montgomery took up a bill this week that would change that system.

Auburn football player uses NIL funds to open a community hub in Birmingham

Jourdin Crawford, a freshman defensive lineman at Auburn, used earnings from a Name, Image, and Likeness deal to give back to his hometown.

Ivey commutes death sentence of inmate whose accomplice fired fatal shot

Charles “Sonny” Burton was sentenced to death for the killing of Doug Battle during a 1991 robbery. However, another man shot Battle when Burton had left the building.

More Front Page Coverage