2019
DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2019.32.83.18126
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Understanding the bricks to build better surgical oncology unit at Maputo Central Hospital: prevalent surgical cancers and residents knowledge

Abstract: Introduction Cancer is a growing concern in Mozambique. However, the country has limited facilities and few oncologists. Surgical oncologists are an unmet need. The aim of this study was to assess residents' knowledge in prevalent cancer domains and to identify and characterize prevalent cancers treated by surgery at Maputo Central Hospital, the largest hospital in Mozambique. The expectations were that the findings shall inform the development of a comprehensive curriculum in surgical oncology fe… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In Mozambique, the knowledge in prevalent cancer domains is well characterised, as well as the prevalent cancers treated by surgery at Maputo Central Hospital (MCH), the main hospital in Mozambique, together with residents’ oncological knowledge. Results obtained, besides confirming oesophageal cancer as the most prevalent malignant tumour treated by general and thoracic surgery, with advanced-stage diagnoses requiring multimodal treatment, informed the need to improve residents’ oncology knowledge, supporting the necessity of a surgical oncology training tailored to suit local needs [7, 112]. The improvement of resources, such as tests and procedures to diagnose OSCC are also urgent.…”
Section: Cancer Research Prevention and Health Care Resources In Aoccmentioning
confidence: 94%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In Mozambique, the knowledge in prevalent cancer domains is well characterised, as well as the prevalent cancers treated by surgery at Maputo Central Hospital (MCH), the main hospital in Mozambique, together with residents’ oncological knowledge. Results obtained, besides confirming oesophageal cancer as the most prevalent malignant tumour treated by general and thoracic surgery, with advanced-stage diagnoses requiring multimodal treatment, informed the need to improve residents’ oncology knowledge, supporting the necessity of a surgical oncology training tailored to suit local needs [7, 112]. The improvement of resources, such as tests and procedures to diagnose OSCC are also urgent.…”
Section: Cancer Research Prevention and Health Care Resources In Aoccmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Africa faces a rising burden of cancer, namely oesophageal cancer along the AOCC. Yet, cancer research is still scarce in the continent to meet this public health challenge and few people are equipped to conduct research in the area despite remarkable progress in building human research capacity over the last decade [7, 112, 113]. In Tanzania, a great part of oncology trainees would like to incorporate research into their careers, but inadequate training in research methodology and absence of longitudinal mentorship is a drawback [114].…”
Section: Cancer Research Prevention and Health Care Resources In Aoccmentioning
confidence: 99%