GENEVA, Switzerland, November 18, 2021/ — City Cancer Challenge (C/Can) today announced that the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) has committed to bolster efforts to improve cancer care in Kumasi through a six-month project, “Strengthening Health Systems Capacities to meet local needs”.

Building on an existing collaboration between C/Can and the city of Kumasi to increase access to quality cancer care, the project will be implemented by C/Can and a multisectoral coalition of local stakeholders, with the support of Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH on behalf of the BMZ.

C/Can CEO Susan Henshall said: “This new commitment will strengthen and accelerate all of the collective efforts of the city of Kumasi and Ghana to achieve quality improvements in diagnosis and treatment.”

C/Can and local teams will work together to ensure cancer patients receive accurate, timely cancer diagnosis through improvements in services, infrastructure, health workforce and health technologies.

Dr Henshall added: “This support will provide important capacity development opportunities for pathology and diagnostic imaging experts in Kumasi. The application of innovative health technologies to improve the health system capabilities for testing will also ensure healthcare workers have the data they need, and when they need it to better inform clinical decision-making.”

Locally adapted cancer solutions

Located within one of the fastest-growing regions in Ghana, Kumasi provides health services to close to five million people. Since 2019, with the strong support of the Ministry of Health and the Ghana Health Service, Kumasi has utilised the C/Can City Engagement Process Framework to drive a staged city-wide process to assess, plan, and execute locally adapted cancer solutions designed to strengthen the health system’s building blocks.

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As part of this process, 258 health professionals from 38 institutions were brought together across Kumasi to carry out a needs assessment to identify key priorities in cancer diagnosis and treatment. This confirmed that most cancer patients there experience delays in the period between symptom discovery and the start of treatment, highlighting a critical need to remove health system barriers to timely and accurate diagnosis and staging.

Dr Ernest Baawuah Osei-Bonsu, Head of the Oncology Directorate at Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital and member of the C/Can City Executive Committee in Kumasi, highlighted the importance of the grant for the city and the role of C/Can in identifying how best to improve access to cancer care: “The needs assessment process we undertook involving a wide range of local stakeholders over the last two years means that we will now be able to implement sustainable quality improvements, notably speeding up the time taken to provide accurate cancer diagnosis.”

Responding to gaps identified by local stakeholders

In particular, in order to strengthen the availability of priority technologies, C/Can will continue to work closely with the local experts and suppliers selected to implement solutions in the medium term on the requirements for a city-wide Laboratory Networking System for pathology testing. Similarly, C/Can will contribute toward developing and implementing a standardised pathology reporting system in the main laboratories in Kumasi.

Leveraging multisectoral partnerships for sustainability

This new commitment will make a major contribution to strengthening the health ecosystem of Kumasi by convening a targeted coalition of local and global partners able to focus on boosting local capacity, improving accountability in the delivery of cancer care, and strengthening vital leadership skills to ensure long-term sustainability.

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In particular, the leaders of the coalition will focus on strengthening skills to effectively coordinate, operationalise and sustain a collaborative multisectoral network.

About City Cancer Challenge Foundation (C/Can):

C/Can supports cities around the world as they work to improve access to equitable, quality cancer care. Since its launch in 2017 by the Union for International Cancer Control (UICC), C/Can has developed a new model of addressing access to cancer care that, for the first time, leverages the city as a key enabler in a health systems response to cancer. More information (CityCancerChallenge.org)

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of City Cancer Challenge Foundation (C/Can).

AMA GHANA is not responsible for the reportage or opinions of contributors published on the website.

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