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•Patient education and expansion of nontraditional screening programs for unscreened and underscreened populations.•Implement reduction in costs, government health programs, and school based programs for vaccinations.•Adhere to guidelines, ensure access to healthcare, and establish an ethnically similar physician workforce for all patients.•Improve training, work efficiencies, payment reform, and quality metrics.•Ensure widespread use of chemoradiation, identify targets, and develop mutation-specific trials.
One woman dies from cervix cancer every 2 min, adding up to over 270,000 deaths globally per year. This cancer affects a young population, and hence, the loss of life is staggering. There are many aspects of prevention, screening, and care that are suboptimal. A great deal is known about HPV induced carcinogenesis, yet clinical outcomes have been stagnant over decades. There has been no improvement in cervix cancer survival in the US since the mid-1970s [1]. With increased knowledge of the disease and greater worldwide resources including prevention, screening, and improved therapeutics, there is significant promise for fewer women to die from this virally induced cancer. We focus here on the major problems in prevention, screening, and delivery of care for cervix cancer and provide concrete solutions. With appropriate focus, a major improvement in survival from cervix cancer could be achieved in a short time span.