The cancer registry in cancer control--a review.

Arch Geschwulstforsch

Published: February 1985

The author reviews key elements in the contribution of the cancer registry to cancer control. A cancer registry always requires the direct or indirect cooperation of the medical profession in the reporting of new cancer cases and it must in return provide services which the physician can use in the care of cancer patients. Survival of patients can be assessed and treatment evaluated for the entire reporting area and not just for selected groups. Projections of the needs for future material and manpower resources can be made on the basis of data collected by the registry. The cancer registry is also in an ideal position to monitor the efficacy of screening programs. Data collected by the registry are the basis for epidemiologic investigations. The magnitude of the cancer problem can be measured and variation by time and place identified. The origin of cancer can be studied by a variety of epidemiologic approaches using data from the cancer registry. Should a suspected etiologic factor be altered in the environment the impact of the intervention may be followed using trend data from the registry. The linkage if individual records is essential if the registry is to function accurately and efficiently. Appropriate safeguards for the confidentiality of medical data must be insured. Adequate staffing with persons interested in and able to undertake the analysis and interpretation of the data collected is a must if the cancer registry is to live up to its potential.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cancer registry
24
cancer
12
registry cancer
12
data collected
12
registry
9
collected registry
8
data
6
cancer control--a
4
control--a review
4
review author
4

Similar Publications

Article Synopsis
  • The study aims to create and validate a predictive model for urinary continence status one year after robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) using data collected before and three months after surgery.
  • A total of 9,421 patients from 25 hospitals in Belgium were analyzed to identify factors affecting urinary incontinence, utilizing a questionnaire to measure outcomes.
  • The results reveal that various factors, such as age, preoperative urinary incontinence scores, and quality of life measures, are associated with higher levels of incontinence one year post-surgery, paving the way for better patient-informed treatment decisions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!