A Proposal for a National Cancer Control Plan for the UAE: 2022–2026
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Cancer Burden in the UAE
2.1. Cancer Incidence Rate
2.2. The Most Common Cancer Types
2.3. Cancer Mortality
2.4. Cancer Prevention, Screening, and Early Detection
2.5. Diagnostic Services
2.6. Cancer Management
2.7. Cancer Research
3. The UAE Cancer Control Plan
3.1. The Guiding Principles and Strategic Directions of the UAE Cancer Control Plan as per WHO and EMRO Guidelines
3.2. Definitions of the Strategic Axes and Executive Framework of the UAE Cancer Control Plan
4. Vistas in the Cancer Control Plan
4.1. Expected Cancer Burden
4.2. Cancer Control Program
4.3. Cancer Registry
- Establish the Cancer Registry Advisory Committee to participate in the planning of cancer registry activities, provide feedback on the data and reports, and contribute to data dissemination and advocacy for the registry;
- Establishing and implementing data quality indicators;
- To complete data on cancer stage, mortality, risk factors, and cancer prevalence;
- Increase the trained human resources; work on retention of current staff through training more registry staff and to give them technical and financial support to ensure completeness of cancer registration and sustainability of the cancer registry;
- Collect more inclusive data on cancers as well as non-morphologically;
- Mandatory reporting, by working on legal obligation to notify cancer;
- Adjustments of cancer notification form and electronic notification forms;
- Seek more collaboration from healthcare providers.
4.4. Indicators for Monitoring
4.5. Continuing the Path to Progress and Excellence
4.6. Public Education and Understanding
4.7. Partnership within the Cancer Community
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
References
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Cancer Type | No. of Cases and % | Cancer Type | No. of Cases and % |
---|---|---|---|
Colorectal | 256 (13.67%) | Breast | 825 (36.67%) |
Leukemia | 196 (10.46%) | Thyroid | 302 (13.42%) |
Prostate | 155 (8.28%) | Colorectal | 166 (7.38%) |
Skin | 134 (7.15%) | Leukemia | 118 (5.24%) |
Lip, Oral cavity and Pharynx | 112 (5.98%) | Uterus | 111 (4.93%) |
Thyroid | 110 (5.87%) | Cervix uteri | 82 (3.64%) |
Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma | 107 (5.71%) | Skin | 74 (3.29%) |
Bronchus and Lung | 103 (5.50%) | Ovary | 70 (3.11%) |
Urinary bladder | 91 (4.86%) | Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma | 65 (2.89%) |
Stomach | 59 (3.15%) | Lip, Oral cavity, and Pharynx | 39 (1.73%) |
Cancer Type | No. of Cases and % |
---|---|
Leukemia | 61 (41.8%) |
Kidney and Renal pelvis | 11 (7.5%) |
Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma | 10 (6.8%) |
Liver and intrahepatic bile ducts | 8 (5.5%) |
Brain and CNS | 7 (4.8%) |
Type of Cancer | Target Age Group | Examination | % Of the Population Eligible for Screening Target Age Group | 2017 Investigated Result | Population Coverage Ratio for Target Groups |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Breast | Female ≥ 40 years | Mammogram every two years | 50% | 20,752 | 6.68% |
Colon | Females and males ≥ 40–75 years | FIT Test after every 2 years | 50% | 18,399 | 1.6% |
Cervix | Females All sexually active females, symptom free, aged 25–65 years | Cervical pap smear test should be after every 3 years | 33% | 39,281 | 7% |
Cause/Factor | Root Causes | Reformatory Actions |
---|---|---|
Access to the service |
|
|
Mechanism and quality control of cancer screening services |
|
|
Community awareness for the importance of early examination and Detection of Cancer |
|
|
End User factors influencing the screening and detection service |
| |
Capacity Building in Human Resources and Logistic Support |
|
|
Vision | To reduce deaths through multiple interventions including early detection of cancer in the UAE |
Message | We fight cancer in the UAE hand in hand with our partners and work with innovation and exercising best practices. We are embarking to assemble comprehensive competencies and human resources for a disease-free UAE society |
Objectives of the Strategy | 1. To strengthen the planning and implement it at the national level to combat cancer in the United Arab Emirates 2. To reduce premature and preventable deaths and the risk of developing cancer by 25% by the year 2025 3. To strengthen cancer prevention, early detection, and treatment 4. To ensure sustainability and continuous development of cancer prevention, control, and treatment strategies 5. To enhance the quality of life for cancer patients 6. To ensure continuum of care through well-defined transition points in the healthcare system 7. To develop a framework to enhance, integrate, and coordinate initiatives to combat cancer and outline principles and regulations to supervise the organization 8. To ensure consistency and standardization in practices and help unify efforts in the fight against cancer 9. To consolidate the efforts by providing a legal framework of applicable governmental regulations and policies |
1. | Governance: Focus on developing a strategy and a multi-sectoral committee for the prevention and control of cancer; while ensuring the availability of a sustained budget, adequate national cancer rates, setting costs for care and treatment packages, and determining a mechanism to cover treatment expenses with equity |
2. | Prevention: Focus on adopting healthy life by combating smoking, encouraging physical activity, and healthy food in line with the Non-Communicable Disease control framework/plan. The focus should include vaccinations against hepatitis and HPV |
3. | Early detection: The strategic directions in this area are based on four axes: Awareness of the population about early warning signs and symptoms of cancer, education, continuing education for health staff on the early signs and symptoms of the common cancers, prompt diagnosis and referral for patients, screening programs, and a continuous evaluation of the effectiveness of these programs. The focus should also be employed on accessibility and the affordability of diagnostic tests for suspected cases. |
4. | Treatment: Focus on developing and implementing protocols and best clinical practices based on evidence-based guidelines. Assess human resource needs and focus on accessibility and affordability of cancer care services and extend affordable treatment packages. This must also include the development of integrated, coordinated and prompt referral systems to avoid delays in diagnosis and treatment. |
5. | Palliative care: There is a need to develop integrated multidisciplinary palliative care services including pain care and psychological support, available in hospitals and primary healthcare centers. Developing and implementing protocols for best evidence based clinical practice and integrated care, and a swift and early transition. Palliative care should be included in medical academic programs. |
6. | Research and Surveillance: Develop a population based national cancer registry, hospital registries, and monitor these with an accredited quality assurance program. The area includes focusing on developing and implementing an integrated plan for research according to the priorities of the country. |
First Area |
---|
1. Education and understanding |
Enhancing health awareness about the knowledge of cancer, risk factors leading to cancer and correction of misconceptions about the disease |
2. Prevention |
Launching awareness campaigns and prevention programs against cancer and known causes |
3. Early detection |
Detecting cancer in the early stages to increase the patients’ survival and outcome. It involves periodic clinical assessments and reduces the delays in appropriate treatment referrals to receive treatment promptly |
4. Rapid diagnosis |
A healthcare center should assess condition of the patient promptly in a systematic integrated way and take appropriate medical decisions based on a developed pathway |
Second Area |
5. Treatment |
Provide appropriately validated clinical practices in line with international guidelines for treating cancer according to disease stage to improve outcomes |
6. Ongoing care |
Provide timely transition to post-treatment and palliative care services for cancer patients and educating them about the appropriate ways to live with the disease and directions to avoid disease recurrence |
Third Area |
7. Performance measurements |
Establishing national records including all data sources in a central place and assemble comprehensive data of high quality, accuracy, and to record information about a disease |
8. Workforce capacity building |
Providing a qualified and appropriately trained team to deliver prevention, treatment, continuity of care for patients; and provision of suitable training facilities for the workforce |
9. Research |
Cancer research improves the diagnosis, treatment, outcome, and enhance quality of life by translating quality research and clinical trials for improvements in personalized care |
Strategic Axis | I. Education and Understanding | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Main objectives | Application mechanisms | Measurement indicators | The executing agency | Follow-up |
Raising health awareness about cancer and associated risk factors and correcting the misconceptions | Conducting a national survey on awareness in society assessing knowledge of risk factors and opinions about access to services and early examination | Survey completion rate | Ministry of Health and Protection (Department of Specialized Care) | Ministry of Health and Protection (Department of Specialized Care) |
Raising health awareness about cancer risk factors
| Number of awareness campaigns | Stakeholders | ||
Awareness campaigns synchronized with designated international days for each cancer type | Number of awareness campaigns | Stakeholders | ||
Strategic Axis | Ⅱ. Prevention | |||
Main objectives | Application mechanisms | Measurement indicators | The executing agency | Follow-up |
Monitoring of risk factors between different groups in society and encouragement to adopt healthy lifestyles | Physical activity
| The number of awareness programs | Ministry of Health and Prevention /Care department Specialization/Promotion of health management in participating parties | Ministry of Health and Prevention |
Healthy foods
| The number of awareness programs | |||
Assessment of the presence of carcinogenic factors in the environment and highlighting the environmental pollution and exposure to radiation | The number of awareness programs | |||
Awareness campaigns about the harms of smoking and shisha in young people | The number of awareness programs Monitor smoking rates | |||
Providing preventive vaccinations | Hepatitis B vaccination for prevention of liver cancer for high-risk population | Hepatitis C vaccination coverage rate Children and among those who have major risk | Ministry of Health and Protection/All health authorities | |
HPV vaccination in schools and society for girls aged 13–26 years to prevent cervical cancer | Coverage rate of the targeted category | |||
Strategic Axis | Ⅲ. Early Detection | |||
Main objectives | Application mechanisms | Measurement indicators | The executing agency | Follow-up |
Create a national program for early detection of cancer | Development of a central public electronic recall system for early detection services and identification by e-mail |
| Ministry of Health and Prevention Society/Childhood Department Maternity/Statistics Department and research | Ministry of Health and Prevention the society |
Create a national platform or program for registration of cases that underwent early examination for cancer | ||||
Increase the capacity of logistical and human resources to increase population coverage | ||||
Health insurance and financial coverage for early disclosure |
| Completion rate | ||
Increase awareness about the importance of early detection |
|
| Ministry of Health and Prevention (Community/Participants) | Ministry of Health and Prevention |
Establish a framework and governance policy for quality assurance and early screening services in the health regions |
| Percentage of policy completion and frameworks | Ministry of Health and Prevention community/care management Specialty | |
Raising awareness of common symptoms of cancer in society | Awareness campaigns about the symptoms of the most common cancers in the community | Number of awareness campaigns | All participating parties | |
Strategic Axis | Ⅳ. Rapid Diagnosis | |||
Main objectives | Application mechanisms | Measurement indicators | The executing agency | Follow-up |
Establish an effective referral system between different levels of care for cancer patients |
|
| Service providers, Early examination and Therapeutic services | Ministry of Health and Prevention Participating parties |
Rapid lung cancer diagnosis initiative | Launch of rapid mobile investigation clinics for early detection of lung cancer using X-ray, CT scan, and breath examination for people susceptible to lung cancer | Number of beneficiaries | Entities involved in cooperation With AstraZeneca | |
Strategic Axis | Ⅴ. Treatment | |||
Main objectives | Application mechanisms | Measurement indicators | The executing agency | Follow-up |
Covering the cost of cancer treatment | Adopt a Pay for performance model (Personalized reimbursement model). Dubai health authority is providing therapeutic services where the treatment is covered by insurance and pharmaceutical companies. The results are then evaluated on treatment response/efficacy | Number of beneficiaries | Healthcare service providers | Ministry of Health and Prevention Participating parties |
Accreditation of centers of excellence for cancer treatment | Preparing for specialized centers of excellence (third level) in cancer treatment and its complications and rehabilitation centers | Number of accredited centers of excellence | Stakeholders | |
Strategic Axis | Ⅵ. Ongoing Care | |||
Main objectives | Application mechanisms | Measurement indicators | The executing agency | Follow-up |
Development of palliative care services |
|
| Ministry of Health and Prevention Stakeholders | Ministry of Health and Prevention Participating parties |
|
| Stakeholders | ||
Strategic Axis | Ⅶ. Performance Measurements | |||
Main objectives | Application mechanisms | Measurement indicators | The executing agency | Follow-up |
Annual evaluation for anti-cancer performance indicators |
| The percentage of completion of the national registry, population coverage for early cancer screening among the targeted age groups | Ministry of Health and Prevention Department of Research and Statistics Participating parties | Ministry of Health and Prevention Department of Research and Statistics |
| The percentage of completion of the national cancer registry | Ministry of Health and Prevention Society/Statistics Department of Research and Statistics Participating parties | Ministry of Health and Prevention Department of Research and Statistics | |
Measuring indications:
| Report completion percentage rate of time commitment to access the service | Ministry of Health and Prevention Participating parties | Ministry of Health and Prevention community/care management Specialty | |
| Report completion rate | Ministry of Health and Prevention Participating parties | Ministry of Health and Prevention community/care management Specialty | |
Strategic Axis | Ⅷ. Research | |||
Main objectives | Application mechanisms | Measurement indicators | The executing agency | Follow-up |
The priority for epidemiological and clinical research of cancer | Research work to discover concepts, knowledge and opinions about cancer, risk factors, and screening cancer in the context of encouraging research related to cancer | Research completion rate | Ministry of Health and Prevention Participating parties | Ministry of Health and Prevention community/care management Specialization/Management Statistics and research |
Develop a research agenda for the three most common cancers (breast, colon, and thyroid) | Agenda completion rate | Ministry of Health and Prevention Participating parties | ||
Strategic Axis | Ⅸ. Workforce | |||
Main objectives | Application mechanisms | Measurement indicators | The executing agency | Follow-up |
Providing qualified human resources in the developing field of cancer | Complete medical team specialized in treatingcancer in secondary and specialty care
| The percentage of increase in workforce | Ministry of Health and Prevention Participating parties | Ministry of Health and Prevention community/care management Specialty |
Raising the efficiency of employees, healthcare professionals | Creation of training programs for healthcare workers in the field of cancer and assess the risk factors such as:
| The number of training programs | Ministry of Health and Prevention Community/Training Center and development Participating parties |
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Al-Shamsi, H.O.; Abyad, A.M.; Rafii, S. A Proposal for a National Cancer Control Plan for the UAE: 2022–2026. Clin. Pract. 2022, 12, 118-132. https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12010016
Al-Shamsi HO, Abyad AM, Rafii S. A Proposal for a National Cancer Control Plan for the UAE: 2022–2026. Clinics and Practice. 2022; 12(1):118-132. https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12010016
Chicago/Turabian StyleAl-Shamsi, Humaid O., Amin M. Abyad, and Saeed Rafii. 2022. "A Proposal for a National Cancer Control Plan for the UAE: 2022–2026" Clinics and Practice 12, no. 1: 118-132. https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12010016
APA StyleAl-Shamsi, H. O., Abyad, A. M., & Rafii, S. (2022). A Proposal for a National Cancer Control Plan for the UAE: 2022–2026. Clinics and Practice, 12(1), 118-132. https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12010016