In Australia, girls growing up today may never have to worry about cervical cancer.
Meanwhile, across much of the Western Pacific, the opposite is true, despite the disease being largely preventable. This contrast reveals a troubling truth: in our region, a woman’s chance of surviving cervical cancer largely depends on where she lives.
In 2022, the Western Pacific accounted for over a quarter of the global burden of cervical cancer. High-income countries like Australia began rolling out a vaccine that prevents the disease over a decade ago, but in lower-income countries, access to vaccines, screening, and treatment remains limited. In Pacific Island countries, small populations, stretched health systems and geographic isolation make care even harder to deliver.
Cervical cancer is devastating. It often shows no signs until it is too late, and then brings pain, bleeding and deep suffering. When detected early, it is curable – but treatment is costly, and many families are left grieving, financially overwhelmed, or both. Eliminating cervical cancer is not only a public health priority – it’s a matter of justice.
To
succeed, we need solutions tailored to the Western Pacific’s diversity –
strategies grounded in the specific realities of each community across
our 38 countries and areas. That’s the approach behind the WHO Western
Pacific Regional Office’s Strategic
Framework for Comprehensive Prevention and Control of Cervical Cancer
(2023–2030), which guides countries toward global elimination targets
while recognizing there is no one-size-fits-all solution.
Across the region, countries are showing it is possible to overcome barriers by adapting innovations to local contexts. Here are three promising examples:
One Dose, Big Impact
HPV vaccines are the single most powerful tool we have to prevent cervical cancer. By protecting girls before they are exposed to human papillomavirus, HPV vaccines prevent nearly all cases of cervical cancer later in life.
In 2022, WHO recommended a single-dose HPV vaccine schedule for adolescent girls and boys – instead of the traditional two-dose regimen. It’s cost-efficient, easier to deliver, and just as effective. In 2023, countries using a one-dose schedule increased coverage by 8%, reaching 6 million more girls.
I saw the impact of this remarkable vaccine firsthand while Minister of Health in Tonga. We introduced the HPV vaccine in 2022 and adopted the single-dose schedule the following year. Other countries in the Western Pacific Region – including Lao PDR and Solomon Islands – are doing the same, with support from partners like Gavi and UNICEF.
Indonesia is a particularly bright example of effective immunization: free HPV vaccines for all girls aged 11-12, delivered through schools and communities. By engaging religious leaders and teachers alongside health workers, they have achieved 89% coverage – proving that a tailored approach drives success.
At a time of tightening budgets, the single-dose approach helps countries stretch resources further – protecting more girls, faster. It’s one of the smartest, most cost-effective investments we can make for our region’s future.
Screening Strategies that Reach More Women
Early detection saves lives – but traditional screening programmes are often difficult to scale, especially in remote communities.
Malaysia’s Program ROSE is taking an innovative approach to solve this challenge.
Led by the University of Malaya in partnership with the Australian Centre for the Prevention of Cervical Cancer, Program ROSE (Removing Obstacles to Cervical Screening) pairs self-collected HPV sampling at local clinics with a digital health platform that shares results and connects women to care.
By bringing screening closer to women and making it more accessible, Program ROSE is showing what’s possible when innovation meets local need.
Bringing Care Closer to Home
In the Pacific, access to treatment often requires expensive travel overseas. We’re working to change that.
WPRO's strategic plan calls for regional treatment hubs, where visiting specialists can provide care closer to home. These hubs will reduce costs, strengthen local capacity, and bring treatment within reach for more women – an approach uniquely suited to our geography.
Countries are also having success with mobile outreach. The Advancing Cervical Cancer Elimination in the Pacific (AdvanCE) program, led by the Kirby Institute UNSW Sydney, offers same-day treatment to women who test positive for HPV in seven Pacific Island countries. This locally-led effort brings together health workers, community leaders, and policy-makers to stop cervical cancer in its tracks – a powerful example of regional solidarity in action.
Turning Commitment into Action
The Western Pacific is one of the world’s most diverse regions. What works in Australia may not work in Kiribati or Papua New Guinea. But our diversity is not a challenge – it is a strength. By learning from one another and acting in solidarity, we can ensure no country is left behind.
Indonesia – the newest member of the WHO Western Pacific region – has just hosted the second Cervical Cancer Elimination Forum. The meeting gathered government leaders, policy-makers, global partners like WHO, Gavi and UNICEF, advocates, and more. It proved a powerful opportunity to reaffirm a shared commitment to cervical cancer elimination in our region.
We face a clear choice: accept widening disparities in cervical cancer outcomes or work together to build a future where every woman, no matter who she is or where she lives, has the chance to live a healthy life, free from cervical cancer.
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A version of this commentary appeared in The Jakarta Post.