Abstract

The need for cancer professionals has never been more urgent than it is today. Reports project serious shortages by 2020 of oncology health care providers. Although many plans have been proposed, no role for prevention has been described. In response, a 2-day symposium was held in 2009 at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center to capture the current status of the cancer prevention workforce and begin to identify gaps in the workforce. Five working groups were organized around the following topic areas: (a) health policy and advocacy; (b) translation to the community; (c) integrating cancer prevention into clinical practice; (d) health services infrastructure and economics; and (e) discovery, research, and technology. Along with specific recommendations on these topics, the working groups identified two additional major themes: the difficulty of defining areas within the field (including barriers to communication) and lack of sufficient funding. These interdependent issues synergistically impede progress in preventing cancer; they are explored in detail in this synthesis, and recommendations for actions to address them are presented. Progress in cancer prevention should be a major national and international goal. To achieve this goal, ensuring the health of the workforce in cancer prevention and control is imperative.

Highlights

  • The need for cancer professionals has never been more urgent than it is today

  • In warning the public about a projected critical shortage of medical oncologists in the USA by 2020 [1], the 2007 study commissioned by the American Society for Clinical Oncology (ASCO) stimulated consideration of the unrecognized potential for cancer prevention efforts by its exclusion from the report

  • The ASCO report described factors that contribute to the impending medical oncology shortage

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Summary

Introduction

The need for cancer professionals has never been more urgent than it is today. Reports project serious shortages by 2020 of oncology health care providers. While much remains to be done in both public health and medicine, the field of cancer prevention and control can profit from advances made in these and other fields to understand and address issues faced by its own workforce. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) is interested in building the cancer prevention workforce and provides funding for training and career development awards designed to attract professionals into research careers in cancer prevention [18].

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