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Description
Breast cancer centres, whether new or well established, strive to deliver the highest quality care possible within the limits of their financial and personnel resources. While the basics in diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer are well known, delivering, monitoring, and evaluating care remains a challenge for many sites, with cancer care delivery becoming increasing unsustainable in many countries.Now in its second edition, Breast Cancer: Global Quality Care offers a comprehensive guide on how to establish or enhance a breast care unit, regardless of location. Written by a multidisciplinary team of over 130 experts from across 30 countries, it provides practical strategies for delivering high quality integrated breast cancer care tailored to local economics and resources constraints.Covering every component of the care pathway including imaging, surgery, systemic treatment, nursing, and genetic assessment, the book combines theoretical insights with practical guidance. It defines the targets to strive for, methods to assess care, and key recommendations for how to improve within existing limitations. The book also looks beyond the breast care unit to consider broader themes including accreditation and certification, emerging technologies, media, and the role of government in shaping care.This practical guide will be valuable for anyone working in the field of integrated breast cancer care, including breast care clinicians, those new to the field, and policy makers interested in the social, financial, and political aspects of improving breast care quality. This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read on the Oxford Academic platform and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations.
Table of Contents
- Part 1: Epidemiology
- 1: Sabine Siesling, Lien van Walle, Isabelle Soerjomataram, Otto Visser, Betsy Kohler, Ryan McCabe, Charles Wiggins, and Tomohiru Matsuda: Population-based cancer registries
- 2: Isabelle Soerjomataram, Didier Verhoeven, and Sabine Siesling: The global burden of malignant breast cancer in women
- 3: Claudia Allemani, Lisa Montel, Pamela Minicozzi, Vesna Zadnik, and Veronica Di Carlo: Global trends in breast cancer survival in women
- Part 2: Quality management of breast cancer
- 4: Didier Verhoeven, Matthew Hickey, Sabine Siesling, and F. Lee Tucker: Tackling the value crisis in breast cancer care
- 5: Lorenza Marotti and Isabel T. Rubio: Defining quality breast cancer care in Europe
- 6: Cary S. Kaufman and Terry Sarantou: Defining quality breast cancer care in the US
- 7: Elfi Verheul, Linetta Koppert, Leena Chagla, Richa Jaiswal, Tracey Irvine, Kerstin Sandelin, Irma Fredriksson, Silvia Brotea-Mosoiu, Luiz Henrique Gebrim, Peter Vuylsteke?, Emad Shash, Seigo Nakamura, Tomohiro Matsuda, Sia Kim, Melanie Walker, Samantha Rawlings, Sanjay Warrier, and Vahit Ozmen, and Sabine Siesling: Defining quality breast cancer care around the globe
- 8: Francois P. Duhoux, Razvan Andrei Popescu, and Gabrielle Speijer: Quality of life measurements: Improving patient experience
- 9: Lynda Wyld, Sue Down, Giuseppe Catanuto, Alexandru Eniu, Danny Burke, and Christos Markopoulos: Educational and training harmonization in breast cancer
- Part 3: The guidelines
- 10: Catherine Duggan, Alexandru Eniu, Laure-Anne Teuwen, Lopamudra Das Roy, Neha Goel, Cheng-Har Yip, and Didier Verhoeven: Context-appropriate guidelines: The importance of situational analysis
- Part 4: The multidisciplinary meeting
- 11: Terry Sarantou, Dominique van Uden, Beth Overmoyer, Christobel Saunders, Sabine Siesling, Pankaj G. Roy, Cary S. Kaufman, and Didier Verhoeven: The multidisciplinary breast conference
- Part 5: Quality control: Diagnosis and treatment
- 12: Hans Junkermann, Wolfgang Buchberger, Sylvia Heywang, Alexander Mundinger, Carol Benn, and Sophia Zackrisson: Imaging
- 13: Shahla Masood, Roberto Salgado, Natasha Anwar and Peter Regitnig: Pathology
- 14: Carlos A. Garcia-Etienne, Cary S. Kaufman, Tolga Ozmen, and Cheng-Har Yip: Breast cancer surgery
- 15: Pankaj G. Roy, Maurício Magalhães Costa, and Cary S. Kaufman: Oncoplastic and reconstructive breast surgery
- 16: Dana L. Casey, Sudeshen M. Naidoo, Lawrence B. Marks, Philip Poortmans, and Orit Kaidar-Person: Radiation therapy
- 17: Didier Verhoeven, Agnes Jager, Boudewijn Dullens, Lien van Walle, Tanja Cufer, and Helena Earl: Systemic therapy
- 18: Daan Brandenbarg, Saskia W.M.C. Maass, Nur Aishah Taib, and Haireen Abdul Hadi: Primary care
- 19: Christine Langenaeken, John Weru, and Carole Bouleuc: Supportive, palliative, and end-of-life care
- 20: Victoria Harmer, Cathy Hughes, David Odada, and Vinayak Sonawane: Nursing care
- 21: Luzia Travado, Christina Signorelli, Kimlin Ashing, and Csaba László Degi: Psycho-oncological care for breast cancer patients
- 22: Christina Signorelli, Luzia Travado, and Beverley Lim Høeg: Survivorship
- 23: Marjanka K. Schmidt, Teresa Ramón y Cajal Asensio, Tanja Spanic, and Seigo Nakamua: Genetics
- Part 6: Health information technology
- 24: Fernando Suarez, Gabriëlle Speijer, and Tolga Ozmen: Information technology
- 25: Gert Van den Eynden, Frederik Deman, Hans Junkermann, and Gabriëlle Speijer: Tele-oncology
- Part 7: Breast cancer research
- 26: Eva Sophie Lunde Pedersen, Karan Jatwani, Daniëlle Verschoor, Alain Tardit, and Eva Segelov: The changing clinical research pathway
- 27: Nwamaka Lasebikan, Omolara Aminat A. Fatiregun, and Laure-Anne Teuwen: Barriers for research: A perspective from LMIC
- 28: Diogo Martins-Branco, Wim Demey, Emad Shash, and Evandro de Azambuja: Challenges and threats
- Part 8: Economics of breast cancer care
- 29: Manuela Joore, Xavier Pouwels, Alexandru Eniu, Merel Kimman, and Bram Ramaekers: Costs and value
- 30: Didier Verhoeven and Helena Earl: Essential breast cancer medicines
- 31: Merel Kimman, Yek-Ching Kong, Stephen Jan, Sanne Peters, Manuela Joore, Mark Woodward, Cheng Har Yip, and Nirmala Bhoo-Pathy: South-East Asia perspective
- 32: Sabine Siesling, Agnes Jager, Helena Earl, Merel Kimman, Pankaj G. Roy, and Hans Wildiers: Personalized care
- Part 9: Patients, physicians, and the media
- 33: Beth DuPree, Luis Lasalvia, Lopamudra Das Roy, Lisa Montel, Robyn Roth, and Shahla Masood: How to manage the messaging
- 34: Richard Linforth, Rudi Vermeiren, Cary S. Kaufman, and Robert Mansel: Medico legal aspect
- Part 10: The role of governments and executives
- 35: Wim van Harten, Silvia Brotea-Mosoiu, Tania Cufer, Sabine Siesling, and Didier Verhoeven: Europe
- 36: Sneha Joshi, Anushree Vartak, Gomathi Shankar, Shalaka Joshi, and Chaitanyanand Koppiker: India
- 37: Eduardo Cazap, Adrian Hunis, and Luiz Henrique Gebrim: Latin America
- 38: Carol Benn, Cassandra Mbanje, and Dominic van Loggerenberg: Sub-Saharan Africa
- 39: F. Lee Tucker and Samilia Obeng-Gyasi: USA: A value-based breast care perspective
- 40: Maya Bienz, Neha Goel, Helena Earl, Benjamin Anderson, Didier Verhoeven, and Charlotte Coles: Worldwide breast cancer initiatives
- Part 11: Conclusion
- 41: Didier Verhoeven, Cary S. Kaufman, Pankaj G. Roy, and Sabine Siesling: Conclusion
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