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Resource-stratified implementation of a community-based breast cancer management programme in Peru

Breast cancer incidence and mortality rates continue to rise in Peru, with related deaths projected to increase from 1208 in 2012, to 2054 in 2030. Despite improvements in national cancer control plans, various barriers to positive breast cancer outcomes remain. Multiorganisational stakeholder colla...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The lancet oncology 2017-10, Vol.18 (10), p.e607-e617
Main Authors: Duggan, Catherine, Dvaladze, Allison L, Tsu, Vivien, Jeronimo, Jose, Constant, Tara K Hayes, Romanoff, Anya, Scheel, John R, Patel, Shilpen, Gralow, Julie R, Anderson, Benjamin O
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Language:English
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Summary:Breast cancer incidence and mortality rates continue to rise in Peru, with related deaths projected to increase from 1208 in 2012, to 2054 in 2030. Despite improvements in national cancer control plans, various barriers to positive breast cancer outcomes remain. Multiorganisational stakeholder collaboration is needed for the development of functional, sustainable early diagnosis, treatment and supportive care programmes with the potential to achieve measurable outcomes. In 2011, PATH, the Peruvian Ministry of Health, the National Cancer Institute in Lima, and the Regional Cancer Institute in Trujillo collaborated to establish the Community-based Program for Breast Health, the aim of which was to improve breast health-care delivery in Peru. A four-step, resource-stratified implementation strategy was used to establish an effective community-based triage programme and a practical early diagnosis scheme within existing multilevel health-care infrastructure. The phased implementation model was initially developed by the Breast Cancer Initiative 2·5: a group of health and non-governmental organisations who collaborate to improve breast cancer outcomes. To date, the Community-based Program for Breast Health has successfully implemented steps 1, 2, and 3 of the Breast Cancer Initiative 2·5 model in Peru, with reports of increased awareness of breast cancer among women, improved capacity for early diagnosis among health workers, and the creation of stronger and more functional linkages between the primary levels (ie, local or community) and higher levels (ie, district, region, and national) of health care. The Community-based Program for Breast Health is a successful example of stakeholder and collaborator involvement—both internal and external to Peru—in the design and implementation of resource-appropriate interventions to increase breast health-care capacity in a middle-income Latin American country.
ISSN:1470-2045
1474-5488
DOI:10.1016/S1470-2045(17)30592-2