$1.99m granted to East Africa cancer care
The Foundation of Merck & Co.,
Inc., Kenilworth, NJ, USA (the Foundation) and the American Cancer Society
(ACS) have announced that the Foundation awarded a $1.99m five-year grant to
ACS to improve support and access to care for people living with cancer in
low-and-middle-income countries, particularly in East Africa.
This funding will help ACS
further develop its capacity development approach to expanding patient
navigation to countries with a growing burden of cancer.
More than 70% of the 9 million
cancer-related deaths worldwide are in resource-limited settings where patients
face many barriers in seeking a timely diagnosis and receiving high-quality
cancer care. Patient navigators—whether
nurses providing cancer education or lay health workers linking patients to
transportation services in the community—play a vital role in supporting
patients from the point of diagnosis at a health facility through their
treatment journey.
With support from the Foundation,
ACS will fortify its patient navigation program in Kenyatta National Hospital
(KNH), a national referral hospital in Kenya, and adapt it for a high need
facility in Uganda, the Uganda Cancer Institute (UCI), which serves about 200
patients daily.
“We are excited about the
American Cancer Society’s program to bring patient navigation services to
cancer patients in areas of the world where care coordination is especially
challenging,” says Dr. Julie Louise Gerberding, chief patient officer, MSD and
vice chair, of the Foundation Board of Trustees. “Cancer patients deserve
quality care delivered with compassion, regardless of where they live.”
This grant is a first step toward
broad expansion of patient navigation programs to help more patients in
resource-limited settings receive timely, high-quality cancer care. As part of
this effort, ACS will develop a comprehensive guide and toolkit to develop and
implement patient navigation programs, designed specifically for health
facilities in low- and middle-income countries. Lessons learned from
collaborating with hospitals in Kenya and Uganda will be incorporated into this
guide, which ACS will pilot in health institutions in Asia and Latin America.
ACS hopes to demonstrate that
resource-limited health care institutions can use patient navigation as an
effective tool to improve cancer care. Looking ahead, ACS will help KNH and UCI
integrate patient navigation services into the way they deliver cancer care,
with the goal of transforming the patient experience so patients continue to
receive the timely, high-quality cancer care they need.
“Over the last 30 years, patient
navigation has become a standard of care across the U.S. to address the myriad
hurdles that cancer patients – especially the most vulnerable – confront across
the complicated continuum of cancer care,” says Sally Cowal, senior vice
president of Global Cancer Control, American Cancer Society. “We are eager to
bring our expertise in this area to countries where health system challenges
prevent patients from getting timely diagnoses and treatment.”
“Uganda has a population of 43
million, but there are only 20 oncologists in the entire country. That’s one of
the reasons why patient navigators are so important in helping patients manage
the day-to-day challenges that prevent them from receiving care and empowering
them to seek treatment and stay in care,” says Dr. Jackson Orem, Executive
Director of the Uganda Cancer Institute.
ACS will work with the Rollins
School of Public Health at Emory University in Atlanta to evaluate the
implementation of the patient navigation programs in Kenya and Uganda as well
as the pilot of the program design guide and implementation toolkit. The
evaluation team will disseminate its findings to the global cancer community
and other interested stakeholders to advance the field’s knowledge of how to
effectively support cancer patients in resource-limited settings.
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