Javier-David Benitez-Fuentes, Rodrigo Lastra Del Prado, Miguel Borregon-Rivilla, Alicia de Luna Aguilar, Antonio-David Lazaro-Sanchez, Asia Ferrández-Arias, Paula Rodríguez Payá, Beatriz Grau Mirete, Teresa Quintanar Verduguez, Elena Asensio Martinez, Patricia Iranzo, Ana Callejo, Mara Cruellas Lapeña, Jacobo Gómez Ulla, Alvaro Rodriguez-Lescure
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We highlight opportunities to strategically integrate oncology services within strengthened PHC systems, balancing centralized specialist resources with decentralized community-based care. Evidence from diverse settings illustrates how reinforcing PHC infrastructures enhances preventive measures, early detection, and survivorship care, thus mitigating geographic and socioeconomic disparities. Sustainable financing mechanisms and targeted workforce strategies, including task-shifting and multidisciplinary training, are proposed as essential components. Effective community engagement models demonstrate improved care relevance, acceptance, and outcomes. Additionally, we emphasize the critical role of health policy alignment with universal health coverage objectives, robust pharmacoeconomic evaluations, and evidence-based national cancer control plans. Integrating Alma Ata's principles into contemporary oncology provides a viable, scalable model to advance equitable, accessible, and sustainable cancer care globally, laying the theoretical groundwork for future research initiatives and informed policy development.</p>","PeriodicalId":49093,"journal":{"name":"Cancer Control","volume":"32 ","pages":"10732748251363701"},"PeriodicalIF":2.6000,"publicationDate":"2025-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12317243/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Revisiting Alma Ata: A Blueprint for Cancer Care.\",\"authors\":\"Javier-David Benitez-Fuentes, Rodrigo Lastra Del Prado, Miguel Borregon-Rivilla, Alicia de Luna Aguilar, Antonio-David Lazaro-Sanchez, Asia Ferrández-Arias, Paula Rodríguez Payá, Beatriz Grau Mirete, Teresa Quintanar Verduguez, Elena Asensio Martinez, Patricia Iranzo, Ana Callejo, Mara Cruellas Lapeña, Jacobo Gómez Ulla, Alvaro Rodriguez-Lescure\",\"doi\":\"10.1177/10732748251363701\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Despite significant advances in oncology, cancer care globally continues to face critical challenges, including stark disparities in access, insufficient preventive focus, fragmented primary health care (PHC) integration, unsustainable financing models, workforce shortages, and inadequate community involvement. This paper revisits the Alma Ata Declaration's principles-health equity, universal access, preventive care, and community participation-as a conceptual framework to address these persistent issues in cancer care. We highlight opportunities to strategically integrate oncology services within strengthened PHC systems, balancing centralized specialist resources with decentralized community-based care. Evidence from diverse settings illustrates how reinforcing PHC infrastructures enhances preventive measures, early detection, and survivorship care, thus mitigating geographic and socioeconomic disparities. Sustainable financing mechanisms and targeted workforce strategies, including task-shifting and multidisciplinary training, are proposed as essential components. Effective community engagement models demonstrate improved care relevance, acceptance, and outcomes. 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Despite significant advances in oncology, cancer care globally continues to face critical challenges, including stark disparities in access, insufficient preventive focus, fragmented primary health care (PHC) integration, unsustainable financing models, workforce shortages, and inadequate community involvement. This paper revisits the Alma Ata Declaration's principles-health equity, universal access, preventive care, and community participation-as a conceptual framework to address these persistent issues in cancer care. We highlight opportunities to strategically integrate oncology services within strengthened PHC systems, balancing centralized specialist resources with decentralized community-based care. Evidence from diverse settings illustrates how reinforcing PHC infrastructures enhances preventive measures, early detection, and survivorship care, thus mitigating geographic and socioeconomic disparities. Sustainable financing mechanisms and targeted workforce strategies, including task-shifting and multidisciplinary training, are proposed as essential components. Effective community engagement models demonstrate improved care relevance, acceptance, and outcomes. Additionally, we emphasize the critical role of health policy alignment with universal health coverage objectives, robust pharmacoeconomic evaluations, and evidence-based national cancer control plans. Integrating Alma Ata's principles into contemporary oncology provides a viable, scalable model to advance equitable, accessible, and sustainable cancer care globally, laying the theoretical groundwork for future research initiatives and informed policy development.
期刊介绍:
Cancer Control is a JCR-ranked, peer-reviewed open access journal whose mission is to advance the prevention, detection, diagnosis, treatment, and palliative care of cancer by enabling researchers, doctors, policymakers, and other healthcare professionals to freely share research along the cancer control continuum. Our vision is a world where gold-standard cancer care is the norm, not the exception.