| Literature DB >> 30510896 |
Carolina Espina1, Isabelle Soerjomataram1, David Forman1, Jose M Martín-Moreno2.
Abstract
Through the application of science to public health practice, National Cancer Control Programmes provide the framework for the development of policies on cancer control, with the ultimate goal of reducing cancer morbidity and mortality, and improving quality of life. In the last decade, a substantial number of Member States in the European Union (EU) have formulated and/or updated their National Cancer Control Programmes, Plans or Strategies including primary prevention (health promotion and environmental protection), secondary prevention (screening and early detection), integrated care and organization of services, and palliative care as main elements. Although tobacco control and population-based screening policies are examples of best practices that are gradually being implemented in most of the EU countries, there are still large regional differences in cancer burden arising from the wide variety of social determinants and other epidemiological factors, along with gaps in the policy and practical articulation of cancer control within the health systems. On the other hand, few quantitative assessments are available with regard to evaluating the success or failure of the implementation of these programmes, especially in terms of reducing cancer incidence or mortality. An EU framework to better assess of the effectiveness of cancer prevention policies and the factors triggering shortfall in best practices implementation seems imperative.Entities:
Keywords: Best practice; Cancer prevention; European Union; National Cancer Control Programmes; Policy
Year: 2018 PMID: 30510896 PMCID: PMC6255794 DOI: 10.1016/j.jcpo.2018.09.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer Policy ISSN: 2213-5383
Fig. 1Estimated age-standardised cancer mortality rate (age adjusted per 100,000) in Europe, by country, both sexes, all sites but non-melanoma skin, all ages, 2018.
List of NCCPs identified.
| Country | Most recent NCCPs | year of publication | Main goals, objectives, actions or recommendations on prevention described in the NCCPs (list not exhaustive) | Previous NCCPs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cancer Framework Program Austria | 2014 | Stop smoking Avoiding virus-associated tumour types through vaccination Strengthening health literacy Reduction of traffic emissions Implementing screening programs | No | |
| National Cancer Plan 2008-2010 | 2008 | Refund of consultations geared towards the cessation of tobacco use Screening and care of persons at risk of being genetically predisposed to cancer Extending the age group for vaccination against HPV to young girls aged between 12 and 18 years Improved screening and early diagnosis of breast cancer Systematic cervical cancer screening program Consultation for the prevention of health risks | Cancer Strategy 2003 | |
| No NCCPs | NA | NA | NA | |
| No NCCPs | NA | NA | NA | |
| National Cancer Control Strategy and Action Plan | 2009 | Limitation of public exposure to carcinogens factors (including tobacco and passive smoking, alcohol, sunshine, chemicals, infectious agents and genetic factors) Promotion of healthy lifestyle (including healthy eating and physical activity) Education / information and awareness Training and continuous Education for Health professionals Vaccinations Application of a population based screening Monitoring Research | No | |
| National Oncology Program | 2013 | Strengthening the health literacy of the population in the field of cancer prevention, especially the responsibility for their own health Promote positive changes in nutrition and healthy lifestyle including movement activities Strengthen consistently the effective measures against tobacco smoking by the WHO Together with the Ministries of Health and Education, medical faculties, health insurance companies, civic associations, non-governmental organizations and across the Czech media, initiate curriculum programs that are comprehensive in the field of cancer Ensure the long-term functioning and evaluation of breast cancer screening programs, cervical cancer and colorectal carcinoma, and promote an invite to these examinations Improve early diagnosis of malignant tumours, especially in cooperation with first contact physicians | National Cancer Strategy 2008 | |
| National Cancer Plan IV | 2016 | (The 2016 National Cancer Plan supplements earlier cancer plans from 2000, 2005 and 2010) No children and young people smoking in 2030 Help for special groups and cancer patients who smoke HPV vaccination for young people | National Cancer Plan I 2000 | |
| National Cancer Strategy 2007-2015 | 2007 | Raised consciousness among the population about avoidable cancer risks that is expressed in persistently positive changes in population’s health behaviour (including tobacco products, alcohol and healthful and safe food choices) Reduced cancer risks in work and living environment Early stage cancer finding through screening | No | |
| Development of cancer prevention, early detection and rehabilitative support 2014 – 2025 | 2014 | Finland actively uses the program code "Health in All Policies", under which various actors can reduce cancer and cancer mortality Health promotion involves a wide range of co-operation between different government departments, municipalities, public health organizations and other actors Programs aimed at reducing risk factors for non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are planned and implemented in our country as extensive NCDs network co-operation. A joint NCDs operational program will be prepared in Finland in the future in accordance with the WHO NCD sstrategy New screening programs are introduced in a controlled manner and controlled by Finnish health care The ongoing statutory screening programs are monitored, evaluated and developed to safeguard the effectiveness of the activity Cancer screening involves a set of operations, a screening chain. In order to protect the effects of cancer screenings, centralized control of the whole screening chain must be arranged | National Cancer Plan 2010 | |
| Cancer plan 2014-2019 | 2014 | Goal 1: Promote earlier diagnoses | Cancer: a nation-wide mobilization plan 2003 | |
| National Cancer Plan | 2012 | To increase the informed use of the cancer screening programs of the statutory health insurance funds To take into account the European recommendations for systematic population-based screening programs To evaluate the cancer screening programs in terms of their benefits (including mortality reduction) with the involvement of the epidemiological state cancer registries | National Cancer Plan 2008 | |
| National cancer plan 2011-2015 | 2010 | Reducing the incidence of cancer associated with smoking Reduce the incidence of alcohol-related cancer Reduce the incidence of cancer related to obesity, nutrition and lack of physical activity Reduce the incidence of malignant skin neoplasms National action measures to promote the health of the general population, to provide information and early recognition of the most common types of malignant neoplasms and agents associated with them Develop national screening programs for cervical cancer and breast cancer | No | |
| Hungarian National Cancer Control Programme | 2006 | Controlling the occurrence of factors that play major roles in the development of malignant neoplasms by raising the effectiveness of primary prevention and through promoting public awareness and acceptance (including smoking, alcohol abuse, healthy diet and excessive sunbathing) Diagnosing malignant neoplasms at the earliest possible stage in order to enable effective treatment, through increasing the efficiency, public awareness and acceptance of secondary prevention (screening) | No | |
| National Cancer Strategy 2017-2026 | NR | Ensure prevention programmes are prioritised to reduce cancer incidence (including reducing smoking levels and developing a national skin cancer prevention plan) Improve symptom awareness in the population Increase early diagnosis Focus on social inequalities | A Strategy for Cancer Control and | |
| National Oncology Plan renamed “Technical policy document on the reduction of cancer disease burden – for the years 2011-2013" | 2011 | Fight against smoking Promote healthy eating habits and exercise Fight against the use of alcohol Fight against infectious oncogenic agents Fight against exposure to oncogenic agents in living and working environments Extend organized screening programs for cervical, breast and colorectal cancer so as to halve the differential between observed and expected percentage | No | |
| Oncologic diseases control program for years 2009-2015 | 2009 | Reduce and eliminate the impact of the risk factor of oncological diseases on society (including tobacco, physical activity, infectious diseases and ultraviolet radiation) Establish and implement an organized cancer screening program | No | |
| National Cancer Prevention and Control Program 2014-2025 | 2014 | Develop preventive health care services, educate an informed and healthy society (on diet, physical activity and environmental factors) Improve the organization and implementation of screening for oncological diseases programs | National Cancer Prevention and Control Program 2003-2010 | |
| Plan National Cancer Luxembourg 2014-2018 | 2014 | Promotion of health against the cancer (including tobacco, alcohol and obesity) Cancer prevention (including ionizing radiation for diagnostic purposes, work and environment related cancers and HPV) Cancer screening | No | |
| National Cancer Plan 2017 – 2021 | 2017 | Reduction of cancer incidence (through tobacco control legislation, alcohol control legislation, environment control and protection legislation, occupational Health and Safety (OHS) legislation, protection from UV radiation exposure and vaccination against infectious agents) Improvement of cancer survival (through early detection) | A National Cancer Plan for the Maltese Islands 2007 | |
| National Cancer Control Program 2005-2010 | 2004 | Ensure that as fewer people as possible develop cancer (though action on smoking, overweight/obesity, food, exercise, alcohol, sunbathing and early detection) | No | |
| Cancer Control Strategy for Poland 2015-2024 | 2014 | Objective 9: Raising the level of public health knowledge about cancer risk factors | Establishing the Multi-Year National Cancer Control Programme 2005 | |
| National Program for oncological diseases - 2015 | 2007 | Health Promotion and Primary Prevention: Main actions concerning tobacco consumption, obesity control, promote healthy diet, reduce alcohol consumption and sun exposure (especially in infants and youngsters), promote physical activity and prevent exposure to mutagenic and carcinogenic substances. Screening: Implement organized screening programmes on a population basis | No | |
| Integrated Multi-Annual National Cancer Control Plan for 2016-2020 | 2016 | Promotion of a preventive behaviour by informing people in view of avoiding risk factors as well by vaccination policies against hepatitis B and HPV infections New pilot screening programmes for breast and colorectal cancer, along with strategies to improve the current National Screening Program for Cervix Cancer | National Cancer Plan and Strategy 2002 | |
| No NCCPs | NA | NA | NA | |
| National Cancer Control Programme 2017-2021 | 2017 | Primary prevention: Secondary prevention (on breast, cervix and colorectal programmes) | National Cancer Control Programme 2010-2015 | |
| Strategy in Cancer of the National Health System | 2010 | Health promotion and protection (including actions to reduce smoking, alcohol, and to improve the lifestyles, eating habits and physical activity) Early detection | Strategy in Cancer of the National Health System 2006 | |
| National Cancer Strategy | 2009 | Primary prevention (including smoking policies, solariums regulations and investigation of skin changes) Cancer vaccines Early detection through screening programmes | No | |
| Achieving world-class Cancer Outcomes: a Strategy for England 2015-2020 | NR | Recommendation 2: to publish a new tobacco control plan within the next 12 months | NHS Cancer Plan 2000 | |
| Better Cancer Care, An Action Plan 2015-2020 | 2008 | Prevention: actions to reduce smoking, comprehensive approach to improve diet and tackle obesity, to continue to expand access to physical activity, to publish an action plan on tackling alcohol misuse, to continue to roll out the HPV Immunisation Programme, to improve public awareness about the risks of exposure to the sun and on the use of sunbeds, to consider Health and Safety Executive advice on occupational links to cancer, to support a comprehensive programme of cancer prevention research Early detection and screening | Cancer in Scotland: Action for change 2001 | |
| Together For Health – Cancer Delivery Plan | 2012 | Promote better public awareness of cancer risk factors Reduce smoking, obesity and excess alcohol intake Reduce the gap in inequalities in incidence and mortality rates for cancer Encourage participation in the programme of health checks for people aged over 50, facilitate access to personally relevant, clear and consistent health advice Screening | Design to Tackle Cancer in Wales 2006 | |
| Regional Cancer Framework A Cancer Control Programme for Northern Ireland | NR | Action to reduce smoking levels in younger people as part of an overall programme of lifestyle skills Public awareness of early symptoms of cancers Professional awareness of early signs and symptoms of cancer should also be improved through the development of regional referral guidelines Cancer screening programmes should be enhanced to ensure uptake and effectiveness is maximised The Department should consider the case for the introduction of a human papilloma virus vaccination programme for young girls, when available | Regional Cancer Framework: A Cancer Control Programme for Northern Ireland |
NA: not applicable; NR: not reported
Document not found by the authors.
Confirmed with the corresponding national institution or expert.
Sources: Analysis of National Cancer Control Programmes in Europe [10] and National Cancer Control Programmes: Analysis of Primary Data from Questionnaires Final preliminary report [12].
Status of implementation of cancer screening in the European Union around 2016.
| Country | Breast cancer screening | Cervical cancer screening | Colorectal cancer screening | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Status of population-based programme (year of programme initiation) | Screening policy documented as law or official recommendation | Invitation coverage in 50-69 years age group (annual population) | Status of population-based programme (year of programme initiation) | Screening policy documented as law or official recommendation | Invitation coverage in 30-59 years age group (annual population) | Status of population-based programme (year of programme initiation) | Screening policy documented as law or official recommendation | Invitation coverage in 50-74 years age group (annual population) | |
| Rollout complete; (2014) | OR | 0% | Non population-based | NA | NA | Rollout complete; R (2003) | OR | NR | |
| Rollout complete (2001) | Law | 99.7% | Rollout ongoing; R (2013) | OR | 33.8% | Rollout complete; R (2009) | OR | 81.4% | |
| Non population-based or no program | NA | NA | No program | NA | NA | No program | NA | NA | |
| Rollout complete (2006) | No policy | 104.8% | Rollout ongoing; N (2012) | OR | NR | Rollout complete; N (2008) | OR | 100.5% | |
| Rollout complete (2003) | OR | 39.6% | No program | NA | NA | Piloting; N(2013) | OR | NR | |
| Rollout complete (2002) | OR | 0% | Rollout ongoing; N (2008) | OR | NR | Rollout complete; N (2000) | OR | NR | |
| Rollout complete (2008) | Law | 82.3% | Rollout complete; N (2006) | OR | 67.1% | Rollout complete; N (2014) | Law | NR | |
| Rollout complete (2003) | OR | 69.2% | Rollout complete; N (2006) | OR | 77.1% | Piloting; N(2016) | OR | NR | |
| Rolloutcomplete (1987) | OR | 91.6% | Rolloutcomplete; N (1963) | OR | 97.9% | Piloting; N(2004) | OR | 10.5% | |
| Rollout complete (2004) | OR | 102.7% | Rollout ongoing; R (1991) | OR | 7.3% | Rollout complete; N | OR | 99.1% | |
| Rollout complete (2005) | Law | 90.8% | Planning; N(2016) | Law | NR | Planning; N(2016) | Law | NR | |
| Non population-based or no program | NA | NA | Non population-based | NA | NA | Non population-based | NA | NA | |
| Rollout complete (2001) | Law | 78.5% | Rollout ongoing; N (2003) | Law | 15.2% | Piloting; N(2007) | Law | 1.5% | |
| Rollout complete (2000) | OR | 110.5% | Rollout ongoing; N (2008) | OR | NR | Rollout ongoing; N (2012) | OR | 10.9% | |
| Rollout complete (1990) | Law | 70.6% | Rollout ongoing; N (1989) | Law | 65.1% | Rollout ongoing; N (1982) | OR | 52.4% | |
| Rollout complete (2009) | Law | 98.4% | Rollout complete; N (2009) | OR | 92.7% | Non population-based | NA | NA | |
| Rolloutongoing (2005) | Law | 0% | Rollout ongoing; N (2004) | Law | 75.5% | Rollout ongoing; N(2009) | Law | NR | |
| Rollout complete (1992) | OR | 107.5% | Non population-based | NA | NA | Planning; N (2016) | OR | NR | |
| Rollout complete (2009) | OR | 78.8% | Piloting; N (2015) | OR | NR | Rollout ongoing; N (2013) | OR | 28.5% | |
| Rollout complete (1989) | Law | 96.7% | Rollout complete; N (1970) | Law | 96.7% | Rollout ongoing; N (2014) | Law | 20.3% | |
| Rollout complete (2006) | Law | 101.8% | Rollout complete; N (2006) | Law | 97.7% | Rollout ongoing; N (2012) | Law | 12.5% | |
| Rolloutongoing (1990) | OR | 55.4% | Rollout ongoing; R (1990) | OR | 18.6% | Rollout ongoing; R(2009) | OR | 1.6% | |
| Piloting (2015) | OR | 0.2% | Rollout ongoing; N (2012) | OR | 65% | No program | NA | NA | |
| Non population-based or no program | NA | NA | Planning; N (2008) | OR | NR | No program | NA | NA | |
| Rolloutongoing(2008) | Law | 20.9% | Rollout complete; N (2003) | OR | NR | Rollout complete; N (2009) | Law | 80.0% | |
| Rollout complete (1990) | Law | 84.7% | Non population-based | NA | NA | Rollout ongoing; N (2000) | Law | 11.3% | |
| Rollout complete (1986) | OR | 93.3% | Rollout complete; N (1967) | OR | 79.9% | Rollout complete; R (2008) | OR | 8.5% | |
| Rollout complete (1988) | OR | 111.0% | Rollout complete; N (1988) | OR | 102.1% | Rollout complete; N (2006) | OR | 58.7% | |
N: nationwide; R: regional; NA: not applicable; OR: official recommendation.
Data submitted from two different sources, Calvados and rest of the country.
ndex year for invitation coverage was 2013 for all except Austria (2014), Estonia (2014), Finland (2012), France (2012), Germany (2012) and Lithuania (2014).
Index year for invitation coverage was 2013 for all except Belgium, Estonia (2014), Latvia, and Lithuania where the index year was 2014.
Index year for invitation coverage was 2013 for all except Belgium (2014), Finland (2014), France (2012), Malta (2014), Netherlands (2014), Portugal (2014) and Slovenia (2011-12).
Invitation coverage reported for all ages.