Promoting social inclusion, combating poverty and any form of discrimination, by increasing access to affordable, sustainable and high quality services, including healthcare and social services of general interest, by organising health programs and services oriented towards prevention, early detection (screening) diagnosis and early treatment of cervical cancer for 170,001 women from the South-Muntenia region, of whom at least 50 % belong to vulnerable groups. Long-term impact • Decreasing the number of new cases of cervical cancer (incident) • Decreasing the severity of cervical cancer cases, reducing the number and severity of their complications, with the consequence of reducing hospital care needs, costs related to them and the disabilities caused by complications • Extension of active life, in which people can carry out their professional activity and fulfill family duties independently • Reduction of mortality through cervical cancer • Change population behaviors, by promoting health-friendly ones and reducing those who increase the risk of such services – increase the risk of such services • Increase mortality through cervical cancer • Change population behaviors, by promoting those favourable to health and reducing those who increase the risk of such services – increase the risk of such services • Increasing mortality through cervical cancer • Change in population behaviors, by promoting those favorable to health and reducing those who increase the risk of such services – increase the risk of such services • Increasing mortality through cervical cancer • Change the behaviors of the population, by promoting those favorable to health and reducing those who increase the risk of such services – benefit from such services • Increase mortality through cervical cancer • Change the behaviors of the population by promoting those favorable health and reducing those who increase the risk of services – increase the risk of such services • Increasing the benefits of services to the population – increasing the risk of such services – increasing the risk of such services • Increasing mortality through cervical cancer • Change in population behaviors, by promoting those favorable to health and reduction of those who increase the risk of such services – increasing the risk of such services • Increasing mortality through cervical cancer • Change in population behaviors, promoting health-friendly ones and reducing the risk of such services – increase in the risk of such services • Create mortality through cervical cancer • Change in population behaviours, by promoting those favorable to health and reducing those who increase the risk of such services – increase the risk of such services • Increasing mortality through cervical cancer • Change in population behaviours, by promoting health-friendly ones and reducing the risk of such services – increasing the risk of such services • Increasing mortality through cervical cancer • Change in population behaviours, by promoting health-friendly ones and reducing those that increase the risk of such services – increasing the risk of such services • Increasing mortality through cervical cancer • Change in Population behaviors by promoting those favorable health and reducing those who increase the risk of such services – Increasing the risk of such services • Increasing mortality through cervical cancer • Change the behaviors of the population, by promoting those favorable to health and reducing those that increase the risk of services – benefit from such services • Increasing mortality through cervical cancer • Change in population behaviors, by promoting those favorable health and reducing those who increase the risk of services – benefit from such services • Increasing the benefits from such services 1. Increased access to quality healthcare services, given that people living in rural areas and vulnerable groups have limited access to healthcare services, which in turn has a negative impact on the health of the population. 2. Fewer cases of cervical cancer: as it detects precancerous lesions, the screening procedure decreases or even eliminates the risk of developing cervical cancer. 3. Fewer cases of advanced cancer: screening detects cancer in the early phase before metastasis. 4. Fewer cancer deaths: because early cancer benefits from effective treatments, with increased chances of healing, its detection in this early phase leads to a reduction in the risk of death (yearly they are lost due to premature death by CCU on average 2.6 years of life potential 100,000 women (~ 260 years of life). All project activities come as a response to the identified needs of the target group, contributing to solving the identified problems.