 Kenya na Mwaikan kwa unattikusiko jouma o latestıyonrit는데 wa k Callu dice and Heza story. It is treatable and prognosis of the end result are not a good. Dr. Nyagasi, who is the head of National Cancer Control Program in our presentation, said Kenya loses nine women daily due to cervical cancer, adding that Kenya is placed fourth in cervical cancer deaths globally. In terms of mortality, we lost 28,500 people from cancer in Kenya in 2012, and in 2018, we have seen again an increase to 32,900, almost 33,000 deaths every year. Remember, these are fitters for every year. While mentioning the challenges in cervical cancer prevention and Kenya burden and perspective, Dr. Nyagasi says our health system policies needs to be overlooked. Poor screening coverage, we have not yet impressed a country of screening in our country. When you go to a health facility for screening, what the doctor asks you is what is the problem? Have you come because of a problem? No, you have gone for screening. So our systems do not encourage screening. We need to actually rethink and look at how we can re-focus and change so that even the systems allow our women and our people to go for screening. Cervical cancer is the leading cancer in women in Kenya, contributing to about 5,250 deaths. Unless they are addressed, it will continue to perpetuate gender inequalities and threaten women's health rights. Benda Kedaka and her advocate women for cancer says it's important to advocate to stop cervical cancer. We need to advocate for cervical cancer. It touches on women, it touches on poverty, it touches on health, it touches on nutrition, it touches on collaboration. SDG 17 is about collaboration. If every organisation was to say that we can collaborate, we are achieving SDGs by just tackling one disease area. Advocacy awareness and community education are key strategies for mobilizing for effective nationwide prevention and control of cervical cancer. Benda calls for nationwide advocacy on all social places, national and global calendars. January cervical cancer awareness man, cervical health should be prioritized and for that to happen, the government of Kenya through the National Cancer Control Program has put it that every third week of January, it often falls between 20th to 27th of January, should be cervical cancer awareness week. Dr. JP Bohr, Program Officer with the National Cancer Control Program, pointed out risk factors that increase your chances of getting a disease, highlighting need for early screening and preventing the cervical cancer. When we detect this cancer issue, they can easily be treated and you avoid cancer. Okay? Then also through screening, you can address the cancer and an invasive cancer early and then without you can have better outcomes, better survival. You can avoid and attend the death. We can also prevent the losses associated with cancer. Annual cervical cancer screening by county for the year ended in 2018-2019, total screened was 312,822 while the national target was 10,939,789. Nyanza and the Riftivoli regions topped the list where the lowest low numbers were tarried in the central pass of eastern region. North eastern pass of Kenya recorded the least numbers of screening done. Even as we talk about cancer screening, it is important to put faces to the figures because it is believed Kenya loses nine women daily due to cervical cancer and this is something that needs to be created away and is for Deliver Hillary 4.254 TV, Safaripak, Nairobi