Global engagement

Global engagement

Global engagement: Promoting innovative and inclusive approaches to research

An essential part of TDR’s work is to engage with the global health community to promote and facilitate the role of research for development and to advocate for the use of high-quality evidence to inform policy. TDR is at the interface between research and health care delivery and is embedded within the UN family through its cosponsors (UNICEF, UNDP, the World Bank, and WHO). This unique positioning allows TDR to create a bridge from local communities to the World Health Assembly to enable the broadest possible scope of dialogue and debate across the spectrum of health research – from priority setting to evidence-based policy-making at local, national, regional and global levels.

This global engagement includes promoting a broad range of community-based social innovations that are transforming health care delivery, shaping the research agenda, supporting the translation of evidence to policy, and leveraging a global network of more than 7000 scientists and experts who have been associated with TDR.
   

Recent news

Publications

Global strategy to accelerate the elimination of cervical cancer as a public health problem

Overview

This global strategy to eliminate cervical cancer proposes:

  • a vision of a world where cervical cancer is eliminated as a public health problem;
  • a threshold of 4 per 100 000 women-years for elimination as a public health problem; 
  • the following 90-70-90 targets that must be met by 2030 for countries to be on the path towards cervical cancer elimination:
  • 90% of girls fully vaccinated with HPV vaccine by age 15 years.
  • 70% of women are screened with a high-performance test by 35 years of age and again by 45 years of age
  • 90% of women identified with cervical disease receive treatment (90% of women with precancer treated, and 90% of women with invasive cancer managed).
  • a mathematical model that illustrates the following interim benefits of achieving the 90-70-90 targets by 2030 in low- and lower-middle-income countries:
  • median cervical cancer incidence rate will fall by 42% by 2045, and by 97% by 2120, averting more than 74 million new cases of cervical cancer;
  • median cumulative number of cervical cancer deaths averted will be 300 000 by 2030, over 14 million by 2070, and over 62 million by 2120.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WHO Team
Cervical cancer elimination initiative
Number of pages
52
Reference numbers
ISBN: 9789240014107
Copyright
Some rights reserved.