City
Epaper

'Lessons learnt from Covid could back policies to prevent, treat cancer'

By IANS | Updated: August 23, 2022 23:00 IST

New Delhi, Aug 23 The lessons from India's fight against the pandemic can serve as valuable beacons in ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Aug 23 The lessons from India's fight against the pandemic can serve as valuable beacons in our targeted policies for prevention and treatment of cancer, Union Health Secretary Rajesh Bhushan said on Tuesday.

Bhushan said this while addressing the National Workshop on 'Roadmap for Cancer Treatment' here on Tuesday.

Addressing the workshop, he said: "Any initiative related to cancer control and management cannot be implemented in silos but needs to be taken up with the 'whole of government and whole of society' approach as has been our learning from management of the pandemic, since the issue is cross-cutting across various government and non-government management spheres."

The Union Health Secretary pointed the pandemic has taught us that health is not the exclusive responsibility of only the Union Health Ministry but jointly addressed by various ministries at the Centre and through state governments.

"Health cannot reside only at the tertiary healthcare centers, but has a huge footprint in the primary and secondary levels too. Tertiary health facilities of ministries such as labour, railways, steel, ONGC, atomic energy etc., can be pooled to make a significantly large and sustainable network of healthcare for an exponential impact of healthcare delivery," he noted.

Highlighting the paradigm change that the National Health Mission (NHM) has recently undergone, he noted that not only primary and secondary healthcare services, but referrals with linkages to tertiary health services are being provided through a comprehensive end-to-end delivery solution.

Bhushan identified framing, sharing and adherence of evidence based common SOPs for critical care management as another learning for cancer management. He mentioned that capacity building also to be ensured with clear communication with all stakeholders and feedback procedures put in place.

"We need to adapt and promote health technology and prevention and treatment of cancer such as telemedicine for improved access to care," he stressed.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Rajesh bhushanindiaNew DelhiUnion Health MinistryUnion HealthThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-westIndiUk-indiaRepublic of indiaIndia india
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIranian President Calls for Constructive Role of Brics to Halt West Asia Conflict During Talks With PM Modi

LifestyleEid 2026 Date: When Will Saudi Arabia, UAE and India Celebrate Eid-ul-Fitr?

MaharashtraMaharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis Unfurls 200-Foot National Flag at Nagpur’s Kasturchand Park

NationalAhmedabad Traffic Update for India vs New Zealand T20 World Cup Final: Check Road Closures and Alternate Routes Near Narendra Modi Stadium

AurangabadLocal industries feel heat of Global conflict

Health Realted Stories

HealthGujarat: Hotels, eateries fined for paneer display violations; 615 kg of substandard food destroyed

HealthMinistry of Social Justice clocks highest-ever Rs 11,810 crore expenditure in FY26

HealthIndia to boost biosimilar insulin, CGM manufacturing as Global South looks for support

HealthIndia clocks unprecedented foodgrain output, boosts institutional support to farmers

HealthIndia tightens watch on GLP-1 drugs amid safety and misuse concerns