• Home
  • Kilas Global
  • The EIU's Index of Cancer Preparedness reveals huge gaps in health system readiness and governance
Jumat, 29 Maret 2019 12:20:00

The EIU's Index of Cancer Preparedness reveals huge gaps in health system readiness and governance

The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) has created the Index of Cancer Preparedness (ICP). It draws on a wide range of data relevant to cancer policy and control from 28 countries. The aims of the ICP are to allow benchmarking of national efforts and identify best practice in addressing the cancer challenge.

Australia tops the ICP, followed by the Netherlands and Germany. Saudi Arabia, Romania and Egypt face the largest room for improvement.

The ICP explores the issue of cancer preparedness through three broad domains: 1) policy and planning; 2) care delivery; and 3) health systems and governance. The index found the biggest gaps in the health system domain, especially in middle- and low-income countries.

The study accompanying the ICP identifies the four essentials of cancer preparedness: essential investment (appropriate spending and resources), roadmap (effective planning), foundation (functioning health systems) and intelligence (availability and quality of cancer-related data).
 
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM, - 28 March 2019 - Cancer is the world's second biggest killer, responsible for 9.6m deaths in 2018--roughly one out of six across the globe--and the leading or second largest cause of mortality before the age of 70 in over half the world's countries.

Amid demographic changes such as population ageing, cancer incidence is set to rise by 63% between 2018 and 2040, according to the International Agency for Research on Cancer. A new report by The Economist Intelligence Unit looks at the complexities of this growing menace and at whether the world is ready to face it.
 
Cancer preparedness around the world: National readiness for a global epidemic, funded with support from Novartis, Pfizer and Roche, introduces the Index of Cancer Preparedness (ICP), which draws on a wide range of data relevant to cancer policy and control from 28 countries. The aims of the ICP are to allow benchmarking of national efforts and, even more, to initiate discussion on best practice in addressing the cancer challenge. Australia tops the ICP, followed by the Netherlands and Germany. Saudi Arabia, Romania and Egypt face the largest room for improvement.
 
The ICP explores the issue of cancer preparedness through three broad domains:
policy and planning;
care delivery; and
health systems and governance.
 
The index shows that the highest scores on average are found in policy and planning. However, the countries' performances get weaker when moving from policy to implementation to overall health system readiness and governance. This is particularly the case in middle- and low-income countries.
 
The report identifies the four essentials of cancer preparedness. First, essential investment refers to appropriate spending and resources dedicated to cancer care. Second essential roadmap refers to effective planning, especially via national cancer control plans. Third, essential foundation refers to the need to embed cancer control in an accessible, general health system. And fourth, essential intelligence refers to the need to measure the nature of the challenge as well as how well interventions are working, for example via population-based cancer registries.
 
Martin Koehring, managing editor at the EIU, added: "No health system, no government and no society can afford a lukewarm response to cancer. This group of diseases is already the world's second biggest killer and costs the global economy upwards of US$1trn per year. The ICP is a useful benchmarking tool to help policymakers and other key stakeholders to identify where their countries stand in cancer control compared with their peers and how they can boost their preparedness." (*).
 

Share
Berita Terkait
  • 7 tahun lalu

    Asian cities continue to lead in the third edition of the Safe Cities Index - Tokyo takes the top spot

    Tokyo edges Singapore (2nd) and Osaka (3rd) again to take the top spot in 2019.

    Alongside Tokyo, Singapore and Osaka, Sydney (5th), Seoul (tied 8th) and Melbourne (10th) m

  • 7 tahun lalu

    Tokyo is Asia's best city for "bleisure", reveals new study by The Economist Intelligence Unit

    Tokyo ranks first out of 26 cities in the region for its combination of business and leisure--or bleisure--appeal for travellers
    Singapore, Sydney, Hong Kong and Melbourne jo

  • Komentar
    Copyright © 2012 - 2026 riauone.com | Berita Nusantara Terkini. All Rights Reserved.Jasa SEO SMM Panel Buy Instagram Verification Instagram Verified