Many people don’t get screened for cervical cancer. Self-testing kits can change that
TORONTO — While cervical cancer screening is a routine part of health care for Canadians, many fall through the cracks.
Robby Mukonjero, a 63-year-old who moved to Canada from Kenya in 2023, had never been screened for cervical cancer until she took part in a HPV self-sampling study in Toronto last spring.
Mukonjero heard about the study through Pasan, a community-based health organization that supports people who were previously incarcerated. A short instructional video showed participants how to collect the sample: insert a soft swab into the vagina for 30 seconds and then place it in a tube that’s sent to a lab for testing.
Before taking part in the program, Mukonjero didn’t have a family doctor and didn’t know about routine cervical cancer screening.


