Cancer Care in Resource-Limited Countries: Jordan as an Example.

IF 3.2 Q2 ONCOLOGY
JCO Global Oncology Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-03 DOI:10.1200/GO.24.00237
Hikmat Abdel-Razeq, Akram Al-Ibraheem, Kamal Al-Rabi, Omar Shamiah, Maysa Al-Husaini, Asem Mansour
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Abstract

Jordan, a lower- to middle-income country, is relatively small, but with rapidly growing population and a challenged economy. Cancer is a growing health care problem and currently ranked second, after cardiovascular diseases, as a cause of death. Jordan's national cancer registry continues to suffer from problems mostly related to long lag time in reporting, absence of outcome data, and accurate staging. The number of new patients with cancer diagnosed in Jordan is increasing at an expected, none disturbing rate, fueled by population growth, improving life expectancy, changing population structure that hosts more older population, high rate of obesity, smoking, and lack of adequate exercise. However, age-standardized rate for cancer incidence is significantly lower than Western societies, yet, mortality rate is higher. Despite efforts, cancer is still diagnosed at more advanced stages and at younger age. The Jordan breast cancer program represents a great example of opportunistic screening that led to significant downstaging of breast cancer. Efforts to evaluate the feasibility of screening programs for colorectal and lung cancers are underway. Tremendous efforts resulted in the execution of the largest clinical cancer genetics program in the region that helps identify patients and at-risk relatives for hereditary cancers. Low-resourced countries, including Jordan, will not be able to keep up with the rapidly increasing cost of cancer care. A better access to clinical trials and moving cancer care to ambulatory settings should offset some of this cost. A cancer control program that addresses all issues of cancer care from screening and early detection, through active cost-effective treatment that assures wider access to palliative care, hospice, and survivorship programs under an expanded universal health coverage, is an urgent national health priority.

资源有限国家的癌症护理:以约旦为例。
约旦是一个中低收入国家,国土面积相对较小,但人口增长迅速,经济面临挑战。癌症是一个日益严重的医疗保健问题,目前是仅次于心血管疾病的第二大死因。约旦国家癌症登记处仍然存在一些问题,主要涉及报告滞后时间长、缺乏结果数据和准确分期。由于人口增长、预期寿命延长、人口结构变化(老年人口增多)、肥胖率高、吸烟和缺乏适当锻炼,约旦新确诊的癌症患者人数正在以预期的速度增长,但增长速度并不令人担忧。然而,按年龄标准化的癌症发病率明显低于西方社会,但死亡率却较高。尽管做出了种种努力,但癌症的诊断仍处于晚期和年轻化阶段。约旦的乳腺癌筛查计划就是一个很好的例子,它通过机会性筛查,大大降低了乳腺癌的分期。目前正在努力评估大肠癌和肺癌筛查计划的可行性。通过巨大的努力,该地区实施了最大的临床癌症遗传学计划,帮助确定遗传性癌症患者和高危亲属。包括约旦在内的资源匮乏国家将无法跟上癌症治疗费用的快速增长。更好地利用临床试验和将癌症治疗转移到非住院环境,应能抵消部分费用。制定一项癌症控制计划,解决从筛查和早期发现到积极的、具有成本效益的治疗等所有癌症治疗问题,确保在扩大全民医保范围后,更广泛地提供姑息治疗、临终关怀和幸存者计划,是国家健康的当务之急。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JCO Global Oncology
JCO Global Oncology Medicine-Oncology
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
6.70%
发文量
310
审稿时长
7 weeks
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