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Background: Self-sampling for HPV testing is increasingly adopted for cervical cancer screening globally, including in Sub-Saharan Africa. However, concerns remain regarding women's willingness and ability to collect samples and the effectiveness of educational interventions. Although prior studies in Africa and Nigeria have examined acceptability and barriers, there is limited evidence on whether structured educational interventions can modify women's attitudes toward HPV self-sampling in routine screening contexts. We evaluated the effect of a structured educational intervention on women's attitudes toward self-sampling and, secondarily, explored baseline correlates of willingness to self-sample among Nigerian women. Methods: self-sampling brush. Participants subsequently performed self-sampling privately at participating screening facilities. Post-intervention measurements were collected immediately after the educational session and procedure. Samples were analyzed using DEIA/LIPA HPV assays. Results: Most participants were married (63.2%), belonged to the middle socioeconomic group (69.5%), had prior knowledge of cervical cancer (61.8%), and had never undergone screening (89.5%). At baseline, 91.8% were willing to self-sample. The intervention significantly improved mean attitude scores from 42.6 (SD 8.3) to 50.8 (SD 9.8) (p<0.001). Among women unwilling to self-sample, 50.0% (9/18) were in the lower SES group compared with 12.9% (26/202) among willing participants (p<0.001). In exploratory analyses, younger age (OR 0.95, 95% CI 0.90-1.00), cervical cancer knowledge (OR 1.42, 95% CI 1.00-1.99), middle SES (OR 3.69, 95% CI 1.07-12.66), and pre-intervention attitude (OR 0.89, 95% CI 0.81-0.99) were associated with willingness. Conclusions: A structured educational intervention significantly improved attitudes toward HPV self-sampling. Baseline willingness was high, and exploratory analysis indicate that younger age, better knowledge, and middle SES are associated with willingness. These findings support context-specific educational strategies to optimize HPV self-sampling uptake in Nigeria and similar low-resource settings.
Akintola et al. (Wed,) studied this question.