ecancermedicalscience

ecancermedicalscience es una revista médica de libre acceso (open access), enfocada a las comunidades con menos recursos. Para ayudar a reducir las desigualdades globales en la atención y tratamiento de cáncer, proporcionamos acceso gratuito a todos nuestros artículos y solo cobramos tasas a aquellos autores que cuentan con patrocinios específicos para cubrir costes de la publicación.

La revista considera artículos sobre todos los aspectos de la investigación relacionados con el cáncer, incluyendo biología molecular, genética, fisiopatología, epidemiología, casos clínicos, estudios clínicos controlados (en particular si son estudios independientes o financiados con fondos públicos), sistemas de salud, políticas públicas y los aspectos regulatorios del cáncer. Son de especial interés los artículos centrados en entornos de escasos recursos y la reducción de las desigualdades globales en la atención y el tratamiento del cáncer.

Mariam Hassan

Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital and Research Centre, Lahore, Pakistan

Dr Mariam Hassan discusses her ecancermedicalscience journal article.

The cancer burden is increasing rapidly globally, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), which already face a double burden of infectious diseases and other non-communicable diseases (NCDs).

LMICs also struggle with poor social determinants of health, leading to cancer health disparities, such as delayed diagnoses and increased death rates due to cancer. Contextually, relevant research needs to be prioritised in these regions to ensure feasible, evidence-based healthcare planning and delivery for cancer prevention and control.

Dr Hassan discusses a syndemic framework that has been used to study the disease clustering of infectious diseases and NCDs across varied social contexts to understand how diseases interact adversely and how the wider environmental context and other socioeconomic factors contribute to poor health outcomes within specific populations.

Her team propose using this model to study the ‘syndemic of cancers’ in the disadvantaged population of LMICs and suggest ways for the clear operationalisation of the syndemic framework through multidisciplinary evidence-generation models for the delivery of integrated, socially conscious interventions for effective cancer control.