SC CTSI-Supported Bilingual campaign urges screenings for cervical cancer

The health message aims to raise awareness among Hispanic women.

July 29, 2015

Note: The SC CTSI Pilot Funding program and the SC CTSI Community Engagement (CE) team provided support to the multi-disciplinary team behind the Es Tiempo project. The CE team assisted in the Spanish translation of the film, as well as, the evaluation tools and facilitated an advisory board that provided a cultural perspective on the movie script.

That message in English and Spanish is now adorning bus benches, billboards and lampposts around the Health Sciences Campus as part of a cervical cancer prevention campaign dubbed Es Tiempo.

The message, which also features an image of a jacaranda tree, was spearheaded by Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati, associate professor of preventive medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC, to increase awareness among Hispanic women about the importance of routine cervical cancer screenings.

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Baezconde-Garbanati said the project was initiated after Laila Muderspach, chair of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the Keck School of Medicine, noticed high rates of Hispanic women coming in with advanced cervical cancer, suggesting that many were not getting regular screenings. Cervical cancer remains a leading cause of cancer morbidity and mortality among Hispanic women even though it is largely preventable through screenings and vaccination against human papillomavirus (HPV).

Easy to do

Baezconde-Garbanati took on the campaign in an effort to change those rates, at least in the immediate vicinity of HSC. The campaign is designed to remind women of the importance of cervical cancer screening and getting their children vaccinated against HPV. It’s also easy to do and can save lives when done in time.

In addition to the lamppost banners, signs on bus benches and billboards, workers at Clinicas Monseñor Oscar Romero in Boyle Heights and Pico Union are mailing reminders to schedule an appointment to women who have not had a pap test in three years.

Jazmin Gutierrez, a patient at Clinicas Monseñor Oscar Romero, said the campaign opened her eyes to the danger of not getting screened for cervical cancer. She made an appointment for herself and plans to promote cervical cancer screening and HPV vaccination among her friends and family members.

“I believe that people are craving information, and we are beginning to see people respond,” she said. “With this campaign, I feel like we are going to make a difference and save lives in our community.”

The Norris Whittier Foundation, California Community Foundation and the USC Center for Health Equity in the Americas provided funding for the campaign.

The original article was posted on USC News.

NIH Funding Acknowledgment: Important - All publications resulting from the utilization of SC CTSI resources are required to credit the SC CTSI grant by including the NIH funding acknowledgment and must comply with the NIH Public Access Policy.