Saba University School of Medicine, The Bottom, Saba, Netherlands.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Health and Allied Sciences, Ho, Ghana.
Front Public Health. 2020 Dec 3;8:603391. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.603391. eCollection 2020.
African women have double the risk of dying from cancer than women in high-income countries. In Ghana, most women with gynecological malignancies present with advanced-stage disease when treatment is less effective. Barriers to improved cancer outcomes include the availability of cancer screening, affordability of treatment, and access to gynecologic oncology specialists. In response to a paucity of gynecologic oncology providers, an in-country fellowship training program was established at Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH) in 2013. Historically, Ghanaian resident physicians were sent to other countries for fellowship training and were unlikely to repatriate. The establishment of an in-country training program not only addresses the challenge of "brain drain," but also builds local capacity in gynecologic oncology education and emphasizes culturally relevant and accessible healthcare. The four-years gynecologic oncology fellowship program at KATH was developed as part of a longitudinal multi-decade partnership between the University of Michigan and academic medical centers in Ghana. The fellowship trains obstetricians and gynecologists to provide subspecialist clinical and surgical care to patients with gynecologic malignancies. Fellows collaborate with the radiation, oncology and pathology departments, participate in monthly inter-institutional tumor board meetings, conduct research, advise on health policy issues, and train subsequent cohorts. This fellowship is representative of emerging twenty-first-century trends in which subspecialty training programs in low-income countries are strengthened by international collaborations. Providing specialized training in gynecologic oncology can help develop and maintain resources that will improve clinical outcomes for women in low-resources settings.
非洲女性死于癌症的风险是高收入国家女性的两倍。在加纳,大多数患有妇科恶性肿瘤的女性在治疗效果较差时已处于晚期。改善癌症治疗结果的障碍包括癌症筛查的提供、治疗的可负担性以及获得妇科肿瘤专家的途径。为了应对妇科肿瘤专家的短缺,2013 年在科福安诺凯教学医院(KATH)设立了一个国内研究员培训计划。从历史上看,加纳住院医师被派往其他国家接受研究员培训,而且不太可能回国。建立国内培训计划不仅解决了“人才流失”的问题,而且还建立了妇科肿瘤学教育方面的当地能力,并强调了与文化相关且可及的医疗保健。KATH 的四年妇科肿瘤学研究员培训计划是密歇根大学与加纳学术医疗中心之间数十年纵向合作的一部分。该研究员培训妇产科医生为妇科恶性肿瘤患者提供专业的临床和手术护理。研究员与放射科、肿瘤科和病理科合作,参加每月的机构间肿瘤委员会会议,进行研究,就卫生政策问题提供咨询,并培训后续学员。该研究员计划代表了 21 世纪新兴的趋势,即通过国际合作加强低收入国家的专科培训计划。提供妇科肿瘤学的专业培训有助于开发和维持资源,从而改善资源匮乏环境中妇女的临床治疗结果。