New index aims to help countries close breast cancer care gaps

A new tool may give governments a practical way to move from lofty global targets to on-the-ground action in the fight against breast cancer.

Breast cancer has become the most common cancer worldwide, with around 2.3 million new cases and more than 666,000 deaths recorded in 2022, yet only a few countries are on track to meet the World Health Organization’s Global Breast Cancer Initiative goal of reducing mortality by 2.5% annually.

“Across every region, women face systemic inequities that delay their diagnosis, limit their access to innovation, and compromise the quality of our care. These disparities are not incidental. They’re structural, and they reverberate through our families, our communities, and our economies,” Toyin Saraki, founder and president of The Wellbeing Foundation Africa, said at the Concordia summit held on the sidelines of the 80th United Nations General Assembly.

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