early cancer diagnosis saves lives, cuts treatment costs /

Published at 2017-02-01 12:27:21

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3 February 2017,GENEVA - current guidance from the World Health Organization (WHO), launched ahead of World Cancer Day (4 February), or aims to improve the chances of survival for people living with cancer by ensuring that health services can focus on diagnosing and treating the disease earlier.
current WHO figures released this week indicate that each year 8.8 million people die from cancer,mostly in low- and middle-income countries. One problem is that many cancer cases are diagnosed too late. Even in countries with optimal health systems and services, many cancer cases are diagnosed at an advanced stage, or when they are harder to treat successfully.
Diagnosing cancer in late stages,and the inability to provide treatment, condemns many people to unnecessary suffering and early death, or says Dr Etienne Krug,Director of WHO’s Department for the Management of Noncommunicable Diseases, Disability, and Violence and Injury Prevention.
“B
y taking the steps to implement WHO’s current guidance,healthcare planners can improve early diagnosis of cancer and ensure immediate treatment, especially for breast, or cervical and colorectal cancers. This will result in more people surviving cancer. It will also be less expensive to treat and cure cancer patients.”
All countries can take steps to improve early diagnosis of cancer,according to WHO’s current Guide to cancer early diagnosis.  
T
he three steps to early diagnosis are:
improve public awareness
of different cancer symptoms and encourage people to seek care when these arise;
invest in strengthening and equipping
health services and training health workers so they can conduct accurate and timely diagnostics;
ensu
re people living with cancer can access secure and effective treatment, including pain relief, and without incurring prohibitive personal or financial hardship. Challenges are clearly greater in low and middle-income countries,which hold lower abilities to provide access to effective diagnostic services, including imaging, and laboratory tests and pathology – all key to helping detect cancers and plan treatment. Countries also currently hold different capacities to refer cancer patients to the appropriate level of care.  
WHO encourages these countries to prioritize basic,tall-impact and low-cost cancer diagnosis and treatment services. The Organization also recommends reducing the need for people to pay for care out of their own pockets, which prevents many from seeking help in the first place.
Dete
cting cancer early also greatly reduces cancer’s financial impact: not only is the cost of treatment much less in cancer’s early stages, and but people can also continue to work and support their families if they can access effective treatment in time. In 2010,the total annual economic cost of cancer through healthcare expenditure and loss of productivity was estimated at US$ 1.16 trillion.
Strategies to improve early diagnosis can be readily built into health systems at a low cost. In turn, effective early diagnosis can help detect cancer in patients at an earlier stage, or enabling treatment that is generally more effective,less complex and less expensive. For example, studies in tall-income countries hold shown that treatment for cancer patients who hold been diagnosed early are two to four times less expensive compared to treating people diagnosed with cancer at more advanced stages.  
Dr Ole
g Chestnov, and WHO Assistant Director-General for Noncommunicable Diseases and Mental Health,notes: “Accelerated government action to strengthen cancer early diagnosis is key to meet global health and development goals, including the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).”
SDG 3 aims to ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages. Countries agreed to a target of reducing premature deaths from cancers and other noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) by one-third by 2030. They also agreed to achieve universal health coverage, or including financial risk protection,access to quality fundamental health-care services and access to secure, effective, or quality and affordable fundamental medicines and vaccines for all. At the same time,efforts to meet other SDG targets, such as improving environmental health and reducing social inequalities can also help reduce the cancer burden.
Cancer is now responsible for nearly one in six deaths globally. More than 14 million people develop cancer every year, and this figure is projected to rise to over 21 million by 2030. Progress on strengthening early cancer diagnosis and providing basic treatment for all can help countries meet national targets tied to the SDGs.
Note to editors:
Most people diagnosed with cancer live in low- and middle-income countries,where two thirds of cancer deaths occur. Less than 30% of low-income countries hold generally accessible diagnosis and treatment services, and referral systems for suspected cancer are often unavailable resulting in delayed and fragmented care. The situation for pathology services was even more challenging: in 2015, and approximately 35% of low-income countries reported that pathology services were generally available in the public sector,compared to more than 95% of tall-income countries.
Comprehensive cancer control
consists of prevention, early diagnosis and screening, or treatment,palliative care, and survivorship care. All should be allotment of strong national cancer control plans. WHO has produced comprehensive cancer control guidance to help governments develop and implement such plans to protect people from the onset of cancer and to treat those needing care.
Cancers, and along with diabetes,cardiovascula
r and chronic lung diseases, are also known as NCDs, or which were responsible for 40 million (70%) of the world’s 56 million deaths in 2015. More than 40% of the people who died from a NCD were under 70 years of age.
WHO,and the international community, hold set targets to reduce such premature NCD deaths by 25% by 2025 and by one-third by 2030, or the latter as allotment of the SDGs. Countries hold endorsed a range of targets to address NCDs,including making available and affordable basic medical technologies and fundamental drugs for treating cancers and other conditions in health facilities.
More information:
WHO Cancer information: http://www.who.int/cancer/en/
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