# Implementing HPV self-collection: a scoping review of facilitators and strategies among Indigenous women and people with a cervix

**Authors:** Louise Mitchell, Deb Wong, Tamara Butler, Julia Brotherton, Joan Cunningham, Sonya Egert, Kristine Falzon, Gail Garvey, Beverley Lawton, Claire Nightingale, Marion Saville, Natalie Taylor, Claudette Tyson, Kate Wilkinson, Claire Zammit, Lisa J. Whop

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12889-026-26720-x · 2026-02-23

## TL;DR

This scoping review explores how HPV self-collection can be implemented effectively for Indigenous women and people with a cervix to improve cervical cancer screening access and outcomes.

## Contribution

The study identifies Indigenous-led strategies and facilitators for implementing HPV self-collection in culturally responsive ways.

## Key findings

- Facilitators include health literacy, flexible care models, and culturally responsive messaging.
- Community-driven strategies combining outreach and education are most effective.
- Indigenous health workers and leaders are central to successful implementation.

## Abstract

Indigenous peoples in high-income settler-colonial countries experience disproportionately high cervical cancer incidence and mortality compared to non-Indigenous populations, reflecting systemic inequities and barriers to culturally safe care. HPV self-collection offers a potential solution to overcoming inequities by enabling women and people with a cervix to collect their own sample, improving autonomy, privacy, and access, and supporting culturally responsive models of care. While self-collection is accurate, acceptable, and increases screening participation, evidence is needed on how best to support implementation to reach Indigenous women and people with a cervix.

This scoping review aimed to identify and describe implementation strategies, barriers, facilitators, and context-specific adaptations to HPV self-collection for cervical screening among Indigenous women and people with a cervix in high-income settler colonial countries.

Eligible sources included peer-reviewed and grey literature published between August 2013 and November 2025 that described barriers, facilitators, implementation strategies, or context-specific adaptations to HPV self-collection among Indigenous women and people with a cervix in Australia, Aotearoa New Zealand, Canada, or the United States of America (USA). Database (PubMed, SCOPUS, ProQuest CINAHL) and grey literature searches targeting Indigenous-specific organisations, government websites were conducted, using the broad search terms: cervical screening, HPV, self-collection, and Indigenous peoples. Data were extracted and mapped against the Health Equity Implementation Framework to identify barriers, facilitators, and strategies relevant to the implementation of HPV self-collection.

32 publications were included, comprising 28 academic publications and 4 from the grey literature. Identified facilitators included client health literacy and knowledge, flexible models of care, culturally responsive care, supportive data and systems, and strengths-based messaging. Indigenous-led solutions were central to enabling these facilitators.

While evidence comparing the impact of individual strategies is not available, community-driven, multi-component strategies were recommended. The most effective strategies appeared to combine flexible delivery models, such as home-based or outreach approaches, with tailored education focusing on increasing knowledge and building trust. Indigenous-led approaches and the involvement of Indigenous health workers and community leaders were central to strategies.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12889-026-26720-x.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** cervical cancer (MONDO:0002974)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13037132/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13037132