Project ECHO: A Telementoring Program for Cervical Cancer Prevention and Treatment in Low-Resource Settings

Author:

Lopez Melissa S.1,Baker Ellen S.1,Milbourne Andrea M.1,Gowen Rose M.1,Rodriguez Ana M.1,Lorenzoni Cesaltina1,Mwaba Catherine1,Msadabwe Susan Citonje1,Tavares José Humberto1,Fontes-Cintra Georgia1,Zucca-Matthes Gustavo1,Callegaro-Filho Donato1,Ramos-Martin Danielle1,Thiago de Carvalho Icaro1,Coelho Robson1,Marques Renato Moretti1,Chulam Thiago1,Pontremoli-Salcedo Mila1,Nozar Fernanda1,Fiol Veronica1,Maza Mauricio1,Arora Sanjeev1,Hawk Ernest T.1,Schmeler Kathleen M.1

Affiliation:

1. Melissa S. Lopez, Ellen S. Baker, Andrea M. Milbourne, Ernest T. Hawk, and Kathleen M. Schmeler, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston; Rose M. Gowen, Su Clinica Familiar, Brownsville; Ana M. Rodriguez, The University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX; Cesaltina Lorenzoni, Hospital Central de Maputo, Maputo, Mozambique; Catherine Mwaba, Susan Citonje Msadabwe, Cancer Diseases Hospital, Lusaka, Zambia; José Humberto Tavares, Georgia Fontes-Cintra, Gustavo Zucca-Matthes, and...

Abstract

Cervical cancer incidence and mortality rates are significantly higher in low- and middle-income countries compared with the United States and other developed countries. This disparity is caused by decreased access to screening, often coupled with low numbers of trained providers offering cancer prevention and treatment services. However, similar disparities are also found in underserved areas of the United States, such as the Texas-Mexico border, where cervical cancer mortality rates are 30% higher than in the rest of Texas. To address these issues, we have adopted the Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes) program, a low-cost telementoring model previously proven to be successful in increasing local capacity, improving patient management skills, and ultimately improving patient outcomes in rural and underserved areas. We use the Project ECHO model to educate local providers in the management of cervical dysplasia in a low-resource region of Texas and have adapted it to inform strategies for the management of advanced cervical and breast cancer in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa. This innovative approach, using ECHO, is part of a larger strategy to enhance clinical skills and develop collaborative projects between academic centers and partners in low-resource regions.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Oncology,Cancer Research

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