Screen Your Way: HPV Self-Collection Implementation Variables for Cervical Screening
by Lisa J. Whop·Updated 2mo ago
9.5 KB1files
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Description
A 2022-2026 implementation study dataset by Lisa J. Whop, evaluating HPV self-collection models in Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Community Controlled Health Organisations. The dataset, shared under CC-BY-4.0, contains variables for a before-and-after study design measuring effectiveness, acceptability, and sustainability. It was last updated on April 22, 2026.
Use Cases
Evaluate the impact of co-designed models of care on screening participation based on the before-and-after study design.
Assess the acceptability and sustainability of HPV self-collection strategies for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities.
Analyze factors influencing cervical screening uptake among under- and never-screened populations.
Support evidence-based scale-up of self-collection in primary care settings based on the study's mixed-methods findings.
Strengths
Dataset is underpinned by a multi-site study with ethical approvals from five named research ethics committees.
Study employs a mixed-methods approach guided by an Indigenist implementation research framework.
File is available in a widely accessible XLS format with a size of 9.5 KB.
Limitations
Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment for large-scale analysis.
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
The dataset's 9.5 KB size suggests a very limited scope, likely containing summary or evaluation variables rather than individual-level records.
Provenance
Source
Lisa J. Whop via figshare.
Collection Method
Data likely collected through a co-designed implementation study using mixed methods.
Time Range
Study context begins July 2022; data collection likely spans 2022-2026.
Freshness
Last updated 2026-04-22 17:32:53; freshness should be verified.
Geography
Australia, specifically within Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs) and similar primary care settings.