National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion (NCCDPHP) Vision: a nation in which all people live
healthy lives free from the devastation of chronic diseases. Within
NCCDPHP, the Division of Cancer Prevention and Control (DCPC) works
with national organizations, state health agencies, tribes and
tribal organizations, territorial health agencies, and other key
groups to develop, implement, evaluate, and promote effective
cancer prevention and control practices.
Slide 2
Goal HP2020: Reduce the number of new cancer cases, as well as
the illness, disability, and death caused by cancer Cancer
Screening Objectives: Increase the proportion of the population who
receive either cervical, colorectal or breast cancer screening
based on the most recent guidelines through community-based
research
Slide 3
National Prevention Strategy A priority in cancer control
research is greater understanding of the multilevel intervention
implementation process. Implementation and dissemination of
multilevel interventions is needed to achieve the goals of the
National Prevention Strategy.
Slide 4
Budget ActivityFY 14 Cancer Prevention and Control Total
$343.12 Million Breast and Cervical Cancer (BA and PPHF, excludes
WISEWOMAN) $183.5 Million Breast Cancer Awareness for Young Women
$4.875 Million Cancer Registries$48.2 Million Colorectal Cancer$42
Million Comprehensive Cancer$19.15 Million Johanna's Law$4.85
Million Ovarian Cancer$4.75 Million Prostate Cancer$12.75 Million
Skin Cancer$2.075 Million Cancer Survivorship Resource
Center$470,000 FY14 Appropriations Budget Allocations
Slide 5
CPCRN Purpose: to work with partners to accelerate the
implementation of evidence-based cancer prevention and control in
communities: to reach underserved populations to reduce cancer risk
to improve screening utilization to reduce death from cancer to
ameliorate health disparities in the community and within health
systems
Slide 6
Research needs of DCPC programs Surveillance data: more
innovative use of surveillance systems Health disparity: focus on
the never/rarely screened, those who are new to ACA Scaling up:
evidence-based interventions, sustainability Communication: risk
communication, provider-patient about screening, cultural
translation Intersections: with other chronic diseases (ex.
diabetes) and other sectors (ex. transportation)
Slide 7
NCI Share CDCs perspective and priorities We share the need for
multilevel research Define levels Evaluate metrics Understand
interactions between levels We share the need to understand
dissemination & Implementation Key factors at each of the human
levels (orgs, provider teams, Individuals) Two Priority Content
areas Colorectal cancer screening Implementation March 16, 17 th
2015 Conference on CRC implementation HPV vaccination Taplin et al
Multilevel interventions in Health Care JNCI 2012, Taplin et al
Primary Care Interfaces Across the Cancer Continuum JNCI 2010