

It’s rare to talk about cancer and use the word "elimination," but with cervical cancer, that’s exactly where we are. We have the tools to make this a disease of the past, yet thousands of women still face it every year—mostly because of a lack of access or simple fear.

It starts with a virus. Almost all cases are caused by HPV. It is incredibly common, and having it isn't a reflection of your character or lifestyle. Normalising this conversation takes away the stigma that keeps people from getting checked.
We believe no one should die from a disease we already know how to stop. Here is the reality of the fight in 2026 and how we can win it together.
The World Health Organization (WHO) and nations like Ireland and Thailand are currently tracking toward a "Cervical Cancer-Free" status by 2040. The 2026 progress report shows we are focused on three pillars:
90% Vaccination: Immunising girls (and increasingly boys) by age 15.
70% Screening: High-performance HPV testing at age 35 and 45.
90% Treatment: Ensuring those with pre-cancer or cancer get immediate care.

Cervical cancer doesn't happen overnight. It is a slow-moving disease almost always caused by persistent infection with high-risk strains of Human Papillomavirus (HPV).
Infection: Most people will have HPV at some point; usually, the body clears it.
Persistence: If the virus stays, it can quietly change the DNA of cervical cells.
Pre-cancer: These are abnormal cells (dysplasia). This is the "Golden Window"—if we catch it here, we can stop cancer before it even starts.
Invasive Cancer: Without screening, these cells eventually turn into a life-threatening tumor.
Australia is on track to be the first country in the world to eliminate cervical cancer, potentially by 2030. How? Through a "School-to-Screen" approach:
Neutralizing the Virus: They implemented gender-neutral HPV vaccination in schools, reaching over 80% of the youth population.
Modern Screening: They transitioned from the traditional Pap smear to the more sensitive HPV DNA test.
The Result: Since the introduction of the vaccine, the prevalence of high-risk HPV types in young women has dropped by over 90%.
The biggest global shift is moving away from the 80-year-old Pap smear (looking at cells) to Primary HPV DNA Testing (looking for the virus itself).
Self-Collection: This is now WHO-endorsed. In countries like Australia, Denmark, and parts of the UK, women can now opt for a self-swab. It has proven to be just as accurate as a clinician-collected sample for identifying high-risk HPV.
The Result: It removes the clinical "barrier" and has increased participation in rural or marginalized groups by up to 40%.
For years, the HPV vaccine required 2 or 3 doses. In 2025-2026, long-term data confirmed that a single dose provides strong, lasting protection.
Why it matters: This makes it dramatically cheaper and easier for developing nations (and rural areas) to vaccinate the next generation.
In the past, a doctor had to "spot" abnormal tissue by eye. New AI tools now analyse the cervix in real-time during an exam, highlighting exactly where a biopsy is needed with much higher precision than a human alone.
We are at a tipping point. To reach the WHO’s goal of elimination, we need you to take three steps:
Educate: Ensure the 9–14-year-olds in your life get the HPV vaccine. It is a cancer-prevention shot.
Advocate: Ask your local clinic if they offer HPV primary screening or self-collection options.
Self-Advocate: If you have unusual bleeding, discharge, or pelvic pain, do not let a doctor "wait and see." Ask for a biopsy or colposcopy.
Support: If you can, donate to organizations providing mobile screening units to communities without hospitals.
We have the science. We have the tools. Now, we just need the collective will.

At Tutti Cancer Warriors, cancer warriors apply for a grant by sharing their wish, need, or personal dream — something that would support them emotionally during or after treatment.
One of the warriors who applied told us she wanted to use the grant to create handmade workshops for other cancer warriors at Antrenamente pentru Viață in Romania.

Her wish was beautiful: to offer a practical, accessible activity where people affected by cancer could spend time together, focus on creating something with their hands, and step away, even briefly, from the medical side of their lives. We funded this wish.

The grant was used to cover materials and basic workshop needs, allowing the sessions to take place and be open to other warriors in the community.

This is how our grants create impact:
warriors tell us what they need
we fund their wish
the impact often reaches beyond one person
In this case, one warrior’s wish turned into support for many others.
If you are a warrior (patient or in remission), we want to support your personal project, wish, or specific need.
The Grant: We provide financial support for your joy, your healing, or your creative goals.
The Goal: To prove that your identity is bigger than your diagnosis.
Apply for Your Warrior Grant Here
If you aren't a warrior but want to be a "Dream-Maker," your donation goes directly to these grants. 100% of your contribution is passed on to fund the next warrior's wish.
Donate to Fund a Warrior's Wish
Stay fierce, stay checked, and remember: we were Born to Thrive.
With gratitude,
TCW Team
It’s rare to talk about cancer and use the word "elimination," but with cervical cancer, that’s exactly where we are. We have the tools to make this a disease of the past, yet thousands of women still face it every year—mostly because of a lack of access or simple fear.

It starts with a virus. Almost all cases are caused by HPV. It is incredibly common, and having it isn't a reflection of your character or lifestyle. Normalising this conversation takes away the stigma that keeps people from getting checked.
We believe no one should die from a disease we already know how to stop. Here is the reality of the fight in 2026 and how we can win it together.
The World Health Organization (WHO) and nations like Ireland and Thailand are currently tracking toward a "Cervical Cancer-Free" status by 2040. The 2026 progress report shows we are focused on three pillars:
90% Vaccination: Immunising girls (and increasingly boys) by age 15.
70% Screening: High-performance HPV testing at age 35 and 45.
90% Treatment: Ensuring those with pre-cancer or cancer get immediate care.

Cervical cancer doesn't happen overnight. It is a slow-moving disease almost always caused by persistent infection with high-risk strains of Human Papillomavirus (HPV).
Infection: Most people will have HPV at some point; usually, the body clears it.
Persistence: If the virus stays, it can quietly change the DNA of cervical cells.
Pre-cancer: These are abnormal cells (dysplasia). This is the "Golden Window"—if we catch it here, we can stop cancer before it even starts.
Invasive Cancer: Without screening, these cells eventually turn into a life-threatening tumor.
Australia is on track to be the first country in the world to eliminate cervical cancer, potentially by 2030. How? Through a "School-to-Screen" approach:
Neutralizing the Virus: They implemented gender-neutral HPV vaccination in schools, reaching over 80% of the youth population.
Modern Screening: They transitioned from the traditional Pap smear to the more sensitive HPV DNA test.
The Result: Since the introduction of the vaccine, the prevalence of high-risk HPV types in young women has dropped by over 90%.
The biggest global shift is moving away from the 80-year-old Pap smear (looking at cells) to Primary HPV DNA Testing (looking for the virus itself).
Self-Collection: This is now WHO-endorsed. In countries like Australia, Denmark, and parts of the UK, women can now opt for a self-swab. It has proven to be just as accurate as a clinician-collected sample for identifying high-risk HPV.
The Result: It removes the clinical "barrier" and has increased participation in rural or marginalized groups by up to 40%.
For years, the HPV vaccine required 2 or 3 doses. In 2025-2026, long-term data confirmed that a single dose provides strong, lasting protection.
Why it matters: This makes it dramatically cheaper and easier for developing nations (and rural areas) to vaccinate the next generation.
In the past, a doctor had to "spot" abnormal tissue by eye. New AI tools now analyse the cervix in real-time during an exam, highlighting exactly where a biopsy is needed with much higher precision than a human alone.
We are at a tipping point. To reach the WHO’s goal of elimination, we need you to take three steps:
Educate: Ensure the 9–14-year-olds in your life get the HPV vaccine. It is a cancer-prevention shot.
Advocate: Ask your local clinic if they offer HPV primary screening or self-collection options.
Self-Advocate: If you have unusual bleeding, discharge, or pelvic pain, do not let a doctor "wait and see." Ask for a biopsy or colposcopy.
Support: If you can, donate to organizations providing mobile screening units to communities without hospitals.
We have the science. We have the tools. Now, we just need the collective will.

At Tutti Cancer Warriors, cancer warriors apply for a grant by sharing their wish, need, or personal dream — something that would support them emotionally during or after treatment.
One of the warriors who applied told us she wanted to use the grant to create handmade workshops for other cancer warriors at Antrenamente pentru Viață in Romania.

Her wish was beautiful: to offer a practical, accessible activity where people affected by cancer could spend time together, focus on creating something with their hands, and step away, even briefly, from the medical side of their lives. We funded this wish.

The grant was used to cover materials and basic workshop needs, allowing the sessions to take place and be open to other warriors in the community.

This is how our grants create impact:
warriors tell us what they need
we fund their wish
the impact often reaches beyond one person
In this case, one warrior’s wish turned into support for many others.
If you are a warrior (patient or in remission), we want to support your personal project, wish, or specific need.
The Grant: We provide financial support for your joy, your healing, or your creative goals.
The Goal: To prove that your identity is bigger than your diagnosis.
Apply for Your Warrior Grant Here
If you aren't a warrior but want to be a "Dream-Maker," your donation goes directly to these grants. 100% of your contribution is passed on to fund the next warrior's wish.
Donate to Fund a Warrior's Wish
Stay fierce, stay checked, and remember: we were Born to Thrive.
With gratitude,
TCW Team
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