| Literature DB >> 27814965 |
Ophira Ginsburg1, Freddie Bray2, Michel P Coleman3, Verna Vanderpuye4, Alexandru Eniu5, S Rani Kotha6, Malabika Sarker7, Tran Thanh Huong8, Claudia Allemani3, Allison Dvaladze9, Julie Gralow9, Karen Yeates10, Carolyn Taylor11, Nandini Oomman12, Suneeta Krishnan13, Richard Sullivan14, Dominista Kombe15, Magaly M Blas16, Groesbeck Parham17, Natasha Kassami18, Lesong Conteh18.
Abstract
Every year, more than 2 million women worldwide are diagnosed with breast or cervical cancer, yet where a woman lives, her socioeconomic status, and agency largely determines whether she will develop one of these cancers and will ultimately survive. In regions with scarce resources, fragile or fragmented health systems, cancer contributes to the cycle of poverty. Proven and cost-effective interventions are available for both these common cancers, yet for so many women access to these is beyond reach. These inequities highlight the urgent need in low-income and middle-income countries for sustainable investments in the entire continuum of cancer control, from prevention to palliative care, and in the development of high-quality population-based cancer registries. In this first paper of the Series on health, equity, and women's cancers, we describe the burden of breast and cervical cancer, with an emphasis on global and regional trends in incidence, mortality, and survival, and the consequences, especially in socioeconomically disadvantaged women in different settings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27814965 PMCID: PMC6191029 DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(16)31392-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet ISSN: 0140-6736 Impact factor: 79.321