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Cancer: The story in England Professor Mike Richards National Cancer Director for England International Workshop London, UK, June 2007 Progress on Cancer in England: Overview Where have we come from? Where are we now? What has brought about change? Where next? The Problem of Cancer in England in the 1990s High incidence/mortality Poor survival rates compared with Western Europe (EUROCARE) Inequalities (geographical and by social class) Underfunding (staff and facilities) Long waits Fragmentation of services All-cancers five-year survival index (%) Patients diagnosed 1990-94, followed up to 1999 0 20 40 60 80 0 100 AUSTRIA FRANCE FRANCE AUSTRIA GERMANY SWEDEN SPAIN SPAIN SWITZERLAND SWITZERLAND NETHERLANDS FINLAND SWEDEN NETHERLANDS FINLAND GERMANY ITALY ITALY NO RWAY NO RWAY ENGLAND DENMARK SCO TLAND ENGLAND WALES SCO TLAND DENMARK WALES CZECH REP. SLO VENIA SLO VENIA CZECH REP. ESTO NIA SLO VAKIA SLO VAKIA ESTO NIA PO LAND EURO PE MEN 20 PO LAND EURO PE Nordic countries South and West Europe UK (England, Scotland, Wales) Eastern Europe Data covering less than 100% of country 40 60 80 100 WOMEN Cancer in England: The Late 1990s 1995: Calman–Hine Report (Chief Medical Officers for England & Wales) 1996 1999: : Improving Outcomes Guidance Reports (breast, colorectal …) Pace of change not fast enough. Downing Street Summit Cancer a ‘top priority’ NHS Cancer Plan 2000 First ever comprehensive strategy to tackle cancer in England (prevention palliative care) Key targets and milestones Commitments on investment, workforce, facilities Delivery mechanisms Monitoring Progress on Cancer in England The National Audit Office (which is independent of government) conducted 3 reviews into progress on cancer in 2004/5 These reviews show that substantial progress has been made, but more needs to be done Cancer : Progress on Outcomes Cancer mortality falling (15.7% in 8 years in people under 75) Survival rates improving across a wide range of cancers Experience of care has improved between 2000 and 2004 (surveys conducted by the Department of Health and the National Audit Office) Progress on Cancer Service Organisation Services have changed radically Around 1500 multidisciplinary teams in England Cancer networks are bringing primary, secondary and tertiary sectors together Services for complex surgery are being reconfigured Peer review appraisal of services against national standards is underway Progress on NHS Cancer Plan Commitments (1) Smoking prevalence is falling Breast screening has been extended Bowel screening has started Waiting time targets have been achieved Use of new anticancer treatments is increasing rapidly Accrual of patients into clinical research trials has tripled Progress on NHS Cancer Plan Commitments (2) Additional investment has been made in cancer and palliative care The cancer workforce has expanded New facilities have been installed What has brought about change? Multiple factors: 1. Consistent political priority and profile 2. Having a clear direction of travel (Cancer Plan and NICE guidance) 3. Investment: funding, staff, equipment, drugs 4. National oversight of implementation Cancer Programme Board National Cancer Team 5. Local cancer networks 6. Internal and external monitoring of progress (e.g. National Audit Office) National oversight of implementation Cancer Programme Board National Cancer Team Cancer screening coordination Support for providers: service redesign (QI) Peer review appraisal programme (QA) Network development Support for commissioners (e.g. guidance on PET/CT; brachytherapy etc.) NICE guidance implementation Cancer registry coordination Local Cancer Networks Typically serve populations of 1.5-2.0 million Partnership organisations Service planning Clinical engagement Action Plans with milestones Delivering change: The example of cancer waiting times 2 Key targets set in 2000 to be achieved by 2005 31 day: Diagnosis (decision to treat) to first treatment: (98% operational standard) 62 day: Urgent referral to first treatment: (95% operational standard) Progress on Cancer Waits: 2000 - 2004 Development of infrastructure Cancer Services Collaborative Cancer waiting times database Workforce expansion But: Little or no progress on delivery e.g. only 70% achievement of 62 day target for tumours other than breast cancer Progress on Cancer Waits 2005-2006 (1) National Cancer Waits Project established Problems identified Lack of profile Lack of local ownership Lack of clinical engagement Poor measurement Lack of proactive pathway management Specific blockages (e.g. endoscopy; radiotherapy) Poor communication between Trusts Progress on 62 day target Monthly 62 Day Performance (Monthly CWT-Db provider based statistics) 100.0% 95.0% 85.0% 80.0% 75.0% Month Performance-All Providers Threshold Jul-06 Jun-06 May-06 Apr-06 Mar-06 Feb-06 Jan-06 Dec-05 Nov-05 Oct-05 Sep-05 Aug-05 Jul-05 Jun-05 70.0% May-05 % Performance 90.0% Progress on Cancer Waiting Times 2005-2006 How has this been achieved? High national profile Local leadership: focus and grip Improved data collection: weekly PTL Service redesign: Cancer Services Collaborative Navigators / coordinators within Trusts Intensive Support Team working with “challenged” Trusts Rigorous Performance Management Cancer in England: where next? New challenges Rising incidence of cancer (ageing population) Obesity epidemic Rising expectations in society Limited finances Manifesto commitments Changing NHS New opportunities New technologies New treatments Cancer Reform Strategy, 2007 Cancer in England: Summary We have undoubtedly made progress over the past 5-10 years We still have more to do to achieve our stated aim of being amongst the best in Europe There are multiple new challenges to be faced