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An Evidence-Based National Cancer Control Program (NCCP) Quality Assessment Checklist
Author(s) -
Mei Ling Yap,
Andrew Oar,
Fábio Ynoe de Moraes,
André Ilbawi
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of global oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.002
H-Index - 17
ISSN - 2378-9506
DOI - 10.1200/jgo.18.66800
Subject(s) - checklist , concordance , medicine , critical appraisal , family medicine , quality (philosophy) , grey literature , medline , medical education , alternative medicine , psychology , pathology , political science , philosophy , epistemology , law , cognitive psychology
Background: The 2017 World Health Assembly resolution on cancer (WHA70.12) defined a key action for governments to be the implementation of a national cancer control plan (NCCP) with a focus on equity and access. A survey of member states performed in 2015 by WHO found that 87% of countries have NCCPs but only 68% are operational. There are limited data analyzing the quality of NCCPs and an evidence-based 'best practice' appraisal tool is lacking. Aim: We formulated an evidence-based comprehensive checklist for the critical appraisal of an NCCP, for potential application for countries across all continents and income classifications. Methods: An extensive literature review was performed to identify previous publications used to advise on or assess NCCPs. Each article was reviewed by three investigators and potential quality items were created to form the preliminary checklist. Items were ranked according to the frequency of appearance in the identified publications, then further refined by an expert panel of global cancer partners including NCCP researchers, civil society, NGOs and technical content experts. Checklist items were categorized to ensure comprehensiveness across both the cancer continuum and health systems building blocks. Multiple choice answers for checklist items were created to allow ease of use and reproducibility. Concordance between multiple reviewers was assessed to confirm precision of the appraisal. Results: Twelve publications/documents which advise on NCCP design were identified in the literature. From these, 65 checklist items were identified and included in the tool; each item was present in a median of 2 publications (range 1-8). An additional 13 items which were absent from the twelve documents were added, as the authors and the expert panel viewed these to be important in appraising an NCCP. This gave a total of 78 check list items for quality assessment, grouped in the following categories: (1) General overview; (2) Prevention; (3) Diagnosis, staging and screening; (4) Treatment (5) Service delivery (6) Governance; (7) Health workforce; (8) Health information systems; (9) Research; (10) Finance and (11) Overall summary. The checklist was refined for clarification of language and content after trialing the draft tool for current NCCPs from ten countries. A final validation was performed on six additional countries that demonstrated strong concordance between reviewers, no further changes were made. The final checklist also allows for non-communicable disease (NCD) plans to be appraised as part of cancer policy review in each country. Conclusion: We have developed a comprehensive tool for the quality assessment of NCCPs. An appraisal of all available NCCPs globally is currently underway using this recently-formed check-list. This tool can also potentially be used by governments, policy makers and stakeholders as a 'best practice' guide when formulating and/or updating their country's NCCP.

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