1. Multisector Collaborations and Global Oncology: The Only Way Forward
- Author
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Charmaine Blanchard, Buhle Lubuzo, Phangisile Mtshali, Lawrence N. Shulman, Rebecca DeBoer, Xolisile Dlamini, Katherine Van Loon, Susan C. Msadabwe-Chikuni, Danny A. Milner, Frederick Chite Asirwa, Cyprien Shyirambere, Ellen Baker, Michael M. Mwachiro, Deo Ruhangaza, and Ute Dugan
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Medical education ,Organizations ,Capacity Building ,Prevention ,MEDLINE ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,SPECIAL ARTICLES ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Political science ,Africa ,medicine ,Partnerships for the Goals ,Humans ,Health Services Research ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Mozambique - Abstract
PURPOSE At the 12th meeting of AORTIC (African Organization for Research and Training in Cancer) in Maputo, Mozambique, held between November 5 and November 8, 2019, a special workshop was organized to focus on the need for collaboration and coordination between governments and health systems in Africa with academic, industry, association, and other nongovernmental organizations to effect sustainable positive change for the care of patients with cancer. METHODS Representatives from seven different projects in Africa presented implementation science and demonstration projects of their to date efforts in cancer system improvement including patient access, South-South partnerships, in-country specialized training, palliative care consortium, treatment outcomes, and focused pathology and diagnostic capacity building. Key partners of the various projects served as moderators and commentators during the session. RESULTS From across all the presentations, lessons learned and exemplary evidence of the value of partnerships were gathered and summarized. CONCLUSION The concluding synthesis of the presentations determined that with the broad needs across cancer requiring in-depth expertise at each point on a patient’s journey, no single organization can effect change alone. Multipartner collaborations not only should be the norm but should also be coordinated so that efforts are not duplicated and maximum patient access to cancer diagnosis and care is achieved.
- Published
- 2021