We've found 16 items under your selection of "Cancer continuum" . The most recent items are first.
First Nations, Inuit and Métis approaches to palliative and end-of-life care in Canada
Read about how often cancer patients may receive palliative care in the two years before their deaths in acute-care hospitals.
Read our 2018 report that shines a light on the performance of Canada’s cancer system, showing what’s working and where improvements are needed
Read about cancer care from the patient perspective, and learn about what patients and their families experience as patients live with and beyond cancer
Read this 2017 report about how palliative and end-of-life care is currently delivered for people with cancer, and what changes are needed for the best possible care
Learn about the distances and times many Inuit need to travel to receive cancer care.
Review this 2014 report about the Métis cancer journey developed as a baseline for measuring future progress
Review this 2014 report about the Inuit cancer journey developed as a baseline to measure future progress.
Review this report from 2013 about the First Nations cancer journey as a baseline to measure future progress.
Read this September 2012 report for key learnings about navigation from national activities in implementation and evaluation
Read this 2012 report to learn the steps and considerations for screening patients for distress
Learn about the cancer journey for each of the Inuit Nunangat regions, and promising, culturally responsive resources and services.
Review this 2012 report for practices about ethnocultural identification and gaps in identifying First Nations, Inuit, and Métis cancer patients
Review this 2012 inventory for noteworthy and emerging practices that include First Nations, Inuit, and Métis identifiers in health databases
Review this report from 2011 about the First Nations, Inuit and Métis cancer journey, developed as a baseline to measure future progress
In this foundational report from 2009, learn about the Partnership’s work in advancing cancer control with First Nations, Inuit, and Métis
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