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Global Curriculum

SSO/ESSO Global Training Curriculum

The Society of Surgical Oncology (SSO) and the European Society of Surgical Oncology, (ESSO) in two jointly published reports, highlight the global variations in training and make the case for a streamlined global surgical oncology curriculum of uniform standards. It is envisioned that the application of these minimum uniform standards of training will create a robust workforce of well-trained surgical oncologists to meet the growing need resulting from the rising global cancer burden. 

Global Training Curriculum in Surgical Oncology

SSO, partnering with the ESSO, calls for global curriculum to address variations and inadequacies in training.

 

Author: SSO Staff
Date: 
May 11, 2016

The worldwide effort needed to address the rising cancer burden by streamlining the training of surgical oncologists.

Rosemont, Ill.— May 11, 2016—The lack of an adequately trained workforce of surgical oncologists can be a major detriment in efforts to address the rising global cancer burden, according to two leading international surgical oncology societies.

The Society of Surgical Oncology (SSO) and the European Society of Surgical Oncology, (ESSO) in two jointly published reports, highlight the global variations in training and make the case for a streamlined global surgical oncology curriculum of uniform standards. It is envisioned that the application of this minimum uniform standards of training will create a robust workforce of well-trained surgical oncologists to meet the growing need resulting from the rising global cancer burden. 

The cancer burden is projected to rise globally, from 14.1 million new cases and 8.2 million cancer-related deaths in 2012 to 23.9 million new cases and 14.6 million cancer-related deaths in 2035. A significant proportion of the predicted global cancer burden will affect the less developed regions of the world, which by 2035 will account for 61% (14.7 million) of new cancer cases and 70% (10.3 million) of all cancer-related deaths.  Nearly 80% of cancer patients will need surgical intervention at some point, and by the year 2030, it is estimated that 45 million surgical procedures will be required annually.

The two surgical oncology societies together published their findings on global variations in training and recommendations for a global curriculum in the May 1 online issues of both the Annals of Surgical Oncology and the European Journal of Surgical Oncology. The companion articles, which will appear in print in the June issues, can be found at:

Annals of Surgical Oncology:
Variations in Training of Surgical Oncologists: Proposal for a Global Curriculum
Global Curriculum in Surgical Oncology
 

European Journal of Surgical Oncology:
Variations in Training of Surgical Oncologists: Proposal for a Global Curriculum
Global Curriculum in Surgical Oncology
 

The efforts to develop a global curriculum were initiated when the leaders of the SSO and the ESSO convened a Joint Global Curriculum Committee co-chaired by SSO representative Russell S. Berman, MD, Chief, Division of Surgical Oncology, New York University School of Medicine [SSO Executive Council member and Past Chair of SSO’s Training Committee] and ESSO President Ricardo A. Audisio, MD, to develop a global curriculum for surgical oncology education and training. Each Society had previously developed its own curriculum and both were utilized as a starting point for building the global curriculum. 

“It is my fervent hope that this proposed global curriculum in surgical oncology will serve as a major step forward in our international efforts to address the continued dramatic rise in the global cancer burden,” said Dr. Berman.

The new global curriculum incorporates essential standards derived from each Society’s curriculum to provide a uniform scaffolding of minimum standards that can help to tackle the significant variations in training from region to region throughout the world as identified by Are, et.al. in Variations In Training of Surgical Oncologists: Proposal for a Global Curriculum. It is hoped that such a curriculum will help to build a cadre of well-trained surgical oncologists to meet the global need.

“As a Committee, we agreed that the curriculum should be constructed in a modular fashion to permit flexibility to suit the needs of the different regions of the world with their inherently diverse sociocultural, financial and cultural differences,” said Dr. Audisio. “We also recognize that the curriculum is aspirational and not mandatory in intent.”

During its global research, the Committee noted several concerning findings of which some are highlighted below:

  • Total surgical training length varied between 8 and more than 17 years, depending on the country.
  • Several countries do not have the capability to offer surgical oncology fellowship training programs.
  • Several countries do not offer domestic surgical oncology fellowships yet still consider such training a requirement.
  • There is a wide variability in the location of foreign countries that physicians travel to in order to obtain the required training.
  • There are no structured pathways to integrate the knowledge acquired abroad into the native health and medical systems.

It is these variations that led the two organizations to call for a streamlined global curriculum of minimum and uniform standards to tackle the rising global cancer burden.

“The obligation to confront what was learned from this study falls on every individual within every surgical oncology organization, and no one can serve this role better than those societies that possess the needed academic and financial resources,” said Daniel G. Coit, MD, SSO President, Attending Surgeon, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Professor of Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College.

In developing this new global curriculum, the SSO and the ESSO are following a model created by the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the European Society of Medical Oncology for a medical oncology training approach.

Members of the SSO/ESSO Joint Global Curriculum Committee included: Chandrakanth Are, MD, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Neb. (SSO); Riccardo A. Audisio, MD, University of Liverpool, St. Helens, U.K. (ESSO); Russell S. Berman, MD, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY (SSO); Lynda Wyld, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK (ESSO); Charmaine Cummings, RN, Society of Surgical Oncology, Rosemont, Ill. (SSO); and,  Carine Lecoq (ESSO).

About the Society of Surgical Oncology

The Society of Surgical Oncology (SSO) is the premier organization for surgeons and health care providers dedicated to advancing and promoting the science and treatment of cancer. The Society’s focus on all solid-tumor disease sites is reflected in its Annual Cancer Symposium, monthly scientific journal (Annals of Surgical Oncology), educational initiatives and committee structure. The Society’s mission is to improve multidisciplinary patient care by advancing the science, education and practice of cancer surgery worldwide.

About the European Society of Surgical Oncology
The European Society of Surgical Oncology (ESSO) represents over 20,000 cancer surgeons both within Europe and globally. ESSO’s mission is to support its members in advancing the science and practice of surgical oncology for the benefit of cancer patients through a range of activities including education with a comprehensive educational programme delivered worldwide and its journal, European Journal of Surgical Oncology, research (developing a portfolio of clinical trials in surgical oncology with the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer) and leadership in multidisciplinary care. ESSO’s vision is to disseminate the most appropriate cancer treatment to all cancer patients, regardless of where they reside. ESSO is developing standards of care for cancer patients through its core values: education; homogenization of skills; quality; and ultimately qualification.

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