26/06/2015
Screening for cervical cancer is a public health intervention that must be available to every woman. Here in Kenya we know that screening measures are increasing but there is very little support for 'what next?'. A majority of women seeking treatment for late stage cervical cancer were actually diagnosed in early stages but weren't treated in time. We know screening can be life-saving - let's make it so!
Unbeknownst to American taxpayers, at the same time President Clinton was apologizing for "Tuskegee 1.0," our Federal Government was orchestrating cervical cancer death-rate measurements in India that, today, bear disturbing similarities to the racist debacle in Alabama.