A National Framework for Cancer Surveillance in the United States

Enhancements to cancer surveillance systems are needed for meeting increased demands for data and for developing effective program planning, evaluation, and research on cancer prevention and control. Representatives from the American Cancer Society, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Nation...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer causes & control 2005-03, Vol.16 (2), p.151-170
Hauptverfasser: Wingo, Phyllis A., Howe, Holly L., Thun, Michael J., Ballard-Barbash, Rachel, Ward, Elizabeth, Brown, Martin L., Sylvester, JoAnne, Friedell, Gilbert H., Alley, Linda, Rowland, Julia H., Edwards, Brenda K.
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container_end_page 170
container_issue 2
container_start_page 151
container_title Cancer causes & control
container_volume 16
creator Wingo, Phyllis A.
Howe, Holly L.
Thun, Michael J.
Ballard-Barbash, Rachel
Ward, Elizabeth
Brown, Martin L.
Sylvester, JoAnne
Friedell, Gilbert H.
Alley, Linda
Rowland, Julia H.
Edwards, Brenda K.
description Enhancements to cancer surveillance systems are needed for meeting increased demands for data and for developing effective program planning, evaluation, and research on cancer prevention and control. Representatives from the American Cancer Society, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Cancer Institute, National Cancer Registrars Association, and North American Association of Central Cancer Registries have worked together on the National Coordinating Council for Cancer Surveillance to develop a national framework for cancer surveillance in the United States. The framework addresses a continuum of disease progression from a healthy state to the end of life and includes primary prevention (factors that increase or decrease cancer occurrence in healthy populations), secondary prevention (screening and diagnosis), and tertiary prevention (factors that affect treatment, survival, quality of life, and palliative care). The framework also addresses cross-cutting information needs, including better data to monitor disparities by measures of socioeconomic status, to assess economic costs and benefits of specific interventions for individuals and for society, and to study the relationship between disease and individual biologic factors, social policies, and the environment. Implementation of the framework will require long-term, extensive coordination and cooperation among these major cancer surveillance organizations.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10552-004-3487-5
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subjects American Cancer Society
Cancer
Cancer screening
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)
Cost of Illness
Cost-Benefit Analysis
Data collection
Disease control
Disease prevention
Disease Progression
Epidemiology
Geographical surveys
Health care
Health surveillance
Health surveys
Humans
Infectious diseases
Mass Screening
Mortality
National Institutes of Health (U.S.)
Neoplasms - diagnosis
Neoplasms - epidemiology
Neoplasms - therapy
Palliative Care
Population Surveillance - methods
Preventive medicine
Primary Prevention
Prophets
Public health
Public Policy
Quality of Life
Registries
Social Class
Social policy
Socioeconomic factors
Surveillance
Survival Rate
United States - epidemiology
title A National Framework for Cancer Surveillance in the United States
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