Title: UICCs cancer control program
1- UICCs cancer control program
- Odd Søreide
- Professor
2UICC Global Cancer Control
- STRATEGIC AREAS
- Prevention and early detection
- Tobacco control
- Knowledge transfer
- Capacity building
- NATIONAL CANCER CONTROL PLANS
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4The Norwegian Cancer Plan
- Commissioned by the Norwegian Government 1996
- Published as a Norwegian Official Report 199720
- (250 pages)
- Initiated by The Norwegian Cancer Society (NGO
UICC) - Revised June 2004
5Cancer plans Cancer control programs
- POLICY INSTRUMENT
- Public health program / service framework
- Cancer in a national perspective
- Comprehensive - not fragmented
- AIM
- Improve cancer care
- Reduce morbidity and mortality, increase QoL
- THE NGO PERSPECTIVE
- The role of NGOs
6Norwegian cancer plan Analytical framework
7FACTS
8Which facts?
- Cancer burden
- Reliable base-line data (cancer registries)
- Cancer in the Nordic countries
- IARC
- Capasity assessment (facilities, personel,
programs and services) - Prevention based on realism (not perceived
risk)
9Cancer as a national problem (2004)
1993/97 2018/2020
Men Women
Increase 42
36 Incidence 4
11 Demography 37
25
-
- 50 will die (60 first year)
10Lung cancer Nordic countries
Women
Men
11Prevalence - all cancers
12Hospital resources
- 12 of hospital stays in Norwegian hospitals
- 15 in regional (University) hospitals
- 20 of all in-hospital days
- 22 in regional hospitals
- 17 in district general
- 19 in community hospitals
- gt60 treated in surgical departments
13PERSPECTIVES
14Five leading cancers
15Survival vs. stage.All cancers (men)
Localised disease All stages Regional
disease Distant metasteses
16Cancer cure
- 50 will be cured
- 55 women,
- 45 men
- Treatment
- Surgery in 80 - 85
- Radiation in 40
- Medical 14
- (cytostatics, etc)
17Cancer prevention Death reduction Norway 2000
- Men Women
- Smoking 18 8
- Alcohol 1 lt1
- Working environment 3 ltlt1
- Radon lt1 lt1
- External radiation (x-rays) 2 2
- Diet ? ?
- Infections 2 3
- Obesity/low physical activity lt1 1
- APMIS Suppl. 105 (105 1-146, 1997)
18Cancer deaths - (preventable)
Sub-Saharan Africa
Europe (excl. Eastern
19PRINCIPLES
20War on cancer
- Primary prevention
- tobacco control, vaccines (hep. B / HPV)
- Secondary prevention (early diagnosis)
- Cervix, breast, colorectal (?), prostate (??)
- Tertiary prevention (better primary treatment)
- Better surgery and standardisation of treatment
(10 survival advantage) - Treatment of failures - ? importance
21Principles (models) - (i)
- Evidence based
- clinical effectiveness, magnitude of effect
- palliative care can be evidence based
- Complimentary vs. school medicine
- terminology irrelevant, effect important
- The role of primary care in primary diagnosis,
co-ordinator, etc
22Principles (models) - (ii)
- No competition between palliative and potentially
curative care - Organisation of care (cancer networks)
- Responsibility for evidence base
- research and quality control (audit))
- industry or society
- Globalising evidence, localising decisions
23Resource realities
- Medical services to be delivered (basic,
essential or everything medical useful) - often marginal benefits
- hope as treatment imperative
- Clinical and cost-effectiveness
- Health Technology Assessment
- Priority setting
- WHO essential drug list
24SOCIETY
25- Institutional ethos
- Pressure groups
- Opinion leaders
- Specialty bias
- Custom and practice
- Financial constraints
- Politics
- Research findings
Policy
Evidence
Decision
26Society
- The role of social sciences
- risk behaviour / strategies for prevention
- social gradients (in incidence and outcome)
- The understanding and role of politics
- health care as a market (business opportunity)
- the conflict between standardisation and
individual freedom - priority setting (consequences of free-for-all)
27The role of NGOs
- minimal reaction time, flexible
- demonstration projects
- initiator and facilitator
- working together with government
- watchdog
- UICC partnership with WHO
28Demonstration projects(Oropeza, Peru)
Latin America Cervical Cancer Screening Project
29Norwegian cancer plan Analytical framework
30Conclusions
- Fundamental elements
- Framework concepts (definitions, outcome
measures, etc) - Comprehensiveness (prevention, early detection
and diagnosis, treatment, rehabilitation,
palliative care) - Must be tailored to resource realities
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32FACTS
PRINCIPLES
CHALLENGES
PERSPECTIVES
SOCIETY
SPECIFIC RECOMMENDATIONS
National Cancer Plan
33CHALLENGES (1)
- Optimising treatment - evidence based
- Standardisation
- Palliative care - capacity and competence
- Organising care, administrative and financial
- The informed patient
- Increase knowledge base, better education,
quality assurance - The evidence base - who is responsible
34CHALLENGES (2)
- Prioritisation
- Rehabilitation
- Todays successes - tomorrows problems
- Better co-operation primary and secondary care -
the importance of primary care in diagnosis and
as coordinator - Cancer prevention realistic strategies
35Norwegian Cancer Plan
- Criteria for success
- Organisation of project
- Efficasy and transparency
- The Cancer Plan
- Professional, not wishful thinking
- Based on convincing facts
- Comprehensive
- Political buy-in (initiation and awareness)
36Norwegian Cancer Plan
- Criteria of success
- Political acceptance after wide consultation
- Subsequent funding (National Assembly)
- Stepwise implementation - lump sum seeding
inadequate - Follow-up and evaluation (after 5 yrs)
37Gorbatsjovs doctrineThe act of politics
FACTS (knowledge, evidence)
REFLECTION (confidence)
ACTION
Not an arena for promotion of professional
(subspeciality) interests or wishful thinking
38Health care personel (professionals)
- Pathologists
- Radiation technicians
- Specialist nurses (cancer care)
- The role of education and training
- cancer surgery (not a separate speciality)