Soroptimist Stafford

Soroptimist Stafford Soroptimists Stand Up for Women

There is no excuse. Not football, not alcohol, not "she pushed me too far", not "there are extenuating circumstances", n...
25/06/2026

There is no excuse. Not football, not alcohol, not "she pushed me too far", not "there are extenuating circumstances", not "she deserved it", not "she was asking for it". There is no excuse for violence against women and girls, FULL STOP. The latter figure is likely to be out of date by the time it's posted too.

24/06/2026

That Time of the Month with Naga Munchetty, Dr Nighat Arif and Dr Christine Ekechi

SI Stafford is delighted and extremely proud that our member Barbara Riddle has received recognition for all her work fu...
19/06/2026

SI Stafford is delighted and extremely proud that our member Barbara Riddle has received recognition for all her work fund raising and supporting the Donna Louise Trust, the children’s cancer hospice. The award was presented by Garry Jones, Chief Executive Officer of Support Staffordshire, the voluntary sector infrastructure charity in our locality.

Cervical Cancer Awareness Week and a great time for some good news. Cervical Cancer is entirely preventable. The HPV vac...
18/06/2026

Cervical Cancer Awareness Week and a great time for some good news. Cervical Cancer is entirely preventable. The HPV vaccine ensures that. If every young woman was given access to the vaccine then cervical cancer deaths in young women would be eliminated into the future.
BBC News - Cervical cancer deaths fall to zero in young women given HPV vaccine - BBC News

A new study finds that hundreds of lives have been saved since school-age girls were offered the HPV jab in 2008.

It's Cervical Cancer Awareness Week. Cervical cancer is largely preventable through regular screening and HPV vaccinatio...
16/06/2026

It's Cervical Cancer Awareness Week. Cervical cancer is largely preventable through regular screening and HPV vaccination, as recommended by national guidelines, and it can be cured if detected early and treated promptly.

Yet it remains the fourth most common cancer in women globally, with 660,000 new cases and around 350,000 deaths annually, with 94% of those in low and middle-income countries.

On 17 November 2020, 194 member states signed the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) Resolution to Eliminate Cervical Cancer as a Public Health Problem by 2030.

The Resolution set out three global targets to be met by 2030:

90% of girls fully vaccinated with HPV vaccination by age 15, 70% of women screened by ages 35 and 45, 90% of women with pre-cancer or invasive cancer receiving appropriate treatment.

The key to cervical cancer prevention lies in boosting public awareness, strengthening health literacy, and improving access to information and services.

Cervical screening can detect cervical precancer, and when coupled with timely treatment, can prevent progression to cervical cancer.

At any age, early detection of women with symptoms followed by prompt quality treatment can cure cervical cancer.
Regular screening is essential to prevention, as it usually takes 15-20 years for abnormal cells to become cancer.

In the UK, 30% of eligible women are still not attending their screening appointments.
The seventy-ninth World Health Assembly took place last month in Geneva, when ministers of health, policy leaders, partners and civil society called for stronger health systems and greater accountability to accelerate cervical cancer elimination.

Discussions centred on what it would take to turn political commitment into delivery: expanding HPV vaccination, bringing screening closer to communities, introducing self-sampling, strengthening referral pathways, closing treatment gaps and integrating cervical cancer services into primary health care. There needed to be investment in workforce capacity, improved affordability and ensuring that women, survivors and community voices shaped programmes, and held systems accountable.

The South African Minister of Health reflected that ‘none of this is abstract, behind every percentage is a woman who either received care in time or did not’.

The message was clear: Countries have the tools, evidence, and growing political commitment needed to eliminate cervical cancer. The challenge now is whether health systems can deliver prevention, screening, treatment and care equitably and consistently.

As 2030 approaches, success will depend on turning commitments into action and ensuring every woman, everywhere, can access the prevention, screening, treatment and care she needs. This is how countries move closer to the 90-70-90 targets, bringing elimination within reach.

Across the discussion, countries pointed to common priorities for the next phase: integrated services.
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Our sisters at SI Cannock have an offer for you.        https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18A3kpBJmk/
14/06/2026

Our sisters at SI Cannock have an offer for you. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18A3kpBJmk/

Book your free place for this personal safety session for Women - led by professionals and offered as part of our drive to enable women to feel more safe in many situations.

All details on the poster. We’d love to see you!

Email: [email protected]

Many congratulations to Kim Madill, the inaugural President of our Region's soon to be newly Chartered Club, SI Athena. ...
13/06/2026

Many congratulations to Kim Madill, the inaugural President of our Region's soon to be newly Chartered Club, SI Athena. This acknowledgement of your exceptional public service in the King's Birthday Honours List is wonderful. We are proud of our new Sister in service.

Address

Stafford Rangers Football Club, Astonfields Road
Stafford
ST163UF

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