CerMe may help detect women at a higher risk of contracting human papillomavirus (HPV). Vaccines have been developed that significantly reduce the incidence of cervical cancer. Women with disabilities encounter social and economic barriers to reproductive health care and cervical cancer screening. With the new technology comes the hope that cervical cancer diagnosis can improve in low- and middle-income nations. Black women were more likely than white women to undergo screening for cervical cancer, the study also showed. The analysis can inform the practice of providers overseeing the recommended treatment course of gynecologic cancer patients. Black women with cervical cancer had worse five-year relative survival rates compared to white women.