This article was accepted into the corpus but its outbound wikilinks were never NER-processed — typical at the deepest BFS hop or when the run's entity cap was reached. No expansion funnel to show.
| Corporación Nacional del Cáncer | |
|---|---|
| Name | Corporación Nacional del Cáncer |
| Native name | Corporación Nacional del Cáncer |
| Formation | 20th century |
| Type | Nonprofit organization |
| Headquarters | Santiago, Chile |
| Region served | Chile |
| Language | Spanish |
Corporación Nacional del Cáncer Corporación Nacional del Cáncer is a Chilean nonprofit organization dedicated to cancer control, prevention, patient support, and research facilitation. Founded by clinicians, public figures, and health institutions, the organization has collaborated with national and international bodies to influence public policy and deliver services across urban and rural areas. Its work links clinical oncology, public health initiatives, and community outreach through partnerships with hospitals, universities, and foundations.
The organization was established amid initiatives from actors in Chilean health policy such as the Ministry of Health, Fundación Arturo López Pérez, and Hospital Clínico Universidad de Chile, reacting to trends noted by the Pan American Health Organization, World Health Organization, and Instituto Nacional del Cáncer of Argentina. Early collaborations included clinics like Hospital del Salvador and Hospital Militar, academic centers such as Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile and Universidad de Santiago de Chile, and advocacy groups including Fundación Nuestros Hijos and Teletón. Over time it engaged with international actors like the International Agency for Research on Cancer, National Cancer Institute (United States), and European Commission programs, and entered joint efforts with municipal governments in Valparaíso and Concepción and with professional societies such as the Sociedad Chilena de Oncología Médica and Sociedad de Radiología. Historic campaigns referenced national legislation like the Ley Ricarte Soto and interacted with insurers such as Fonasa and Isapre associations.
The corporation's stated mission aligns with strategic frameworks used by the World Health Organization, Pan American Health Organization, and International Union Against Cancer to reduce cancer incidence and mortality. Objectives include coordinating screening programs in alignment with Chilean Ministry of Health guidance, promoting vaccination programs linked to Organización Mundial de la Salud recommendations, supporting clinical trial networks with universities like Universidad de Chile and Universidad Católica, and advocating for patient rights similar to protections under laws enacted by the Chilean Congress. Specific aims reference collaboration with research institutions such as Centro Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo and Sociedad Chilena de Pediatría for pediatric oncology, and with oncology centers like Instituto Oncológico Fundación Arturo López Pérez.
Governing organs mirror nonprofit models found in public health charities, comprising a Board of Directors with representatives from hospitals such as Hospital Clínico de la Universidad de Chile, academic members from Universidad de Concepción, and civil society delegates from Fundación Las Rosas. Operational departments include Programs and Services, Research and Innovation, Advocacy and Policy, Communications, and Finance, coordinating with clinical networks such as Red de Salud UC Christus and public providers including Servicio de Salud Metropolitano Central. Committees involve experts drawn from institutions like Hospital Clínico Félix Bulnes, Sociedad Chilena de Cirugía, and the Chilean Society of Hematology. Advisory boards have included former ministers and academics affiliated with Universidad Austral de Chile and Universidad de Tarapacá.
Programs encompass population screening initiatives that partner with local authorities in Santiago, Antofagasta, and La Araucanía, vaccination drives coordinated with Instituto de Salud Pública, survivorship and palliative care services modeled on protocols from Hospital del Cáncer de Barretos and Fundación Arturo López Pérez, and patient navigation efforts akin to those in Fundación Más Vida. Clinical support services link patients to oncology units at Hospital Clínico de Magallanes and Hospital Regional de Valdivia, while psychosocial programs draw on experience from Fundación Integra and Fundación Mi Parque collaborations. Training and capacity-building programs are run with medical schools such as Escuela de Medicina de la Pontificia Universidad Católica and allied health programs at Universidad Diego Portales, and volunteer networks interface with civic organizations including Cruz Roja Chilena and Servicio Nacional del Adulto Mayor.
The corporation facilitates epidemiological studies with data sources used by Instituto Nacional de Estadísticas and academic collaborators at Universidad de Chile, Universidad de Concepción, and Universidad Austral. Research areas include cancer registries modeled after Registro Nacional de Cáncer frameworks, clinical trials coordinated with Centro de Estudios Clínicos, and health systems research drawing comparisons to models in Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay. Publications have included epidemiological reports, policy briefs, and peer-reviewed articles submitted to journals similar to Revista Médica de Chile and international periodicals indexed with PubMed and Scopus. Collaborative outputs have involved authors from Centro de Investigación Biomédica, Escuela de Salud Pública, and international partners such as Johns Hopkins University and London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.
Funding streams combine philanthropic contributions from foundations like Fundación Luksic and Fundación Mustakis, grants from national agencies including Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo and Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico, and project financing with multilateral agencies such as the World Bank and Inter-American Development Bank. Corporate partnerships have included pharmaceutical companies operating in Chile and multinational firms subject to regulation by Instituto de Salud Pública, while in-kind collaborations involve hospitals such as Hospital Clínico Universidad Católica and diagnostic laboratories like Instituto de Salud Pública. Strategic alliances extend to patient organizations including Federación Nacional de Padres de Niños con Cáncer and international NGOs such as American Cancer Society and Cancer Research UK.
Reported impacts encompass expanded screening coverage in regions like Biobío and Los Lagos, reductions in time-to-diagnosis for some cancers in partnership sites, and capacity increases in oncology nursing through training programs conducted with Servicio de Salud Metropolitano Norte. Statistical outputs reference registry-derived incidence and survival metrics comparable to national reports produced by Instituto Nacional de Estadísticas and Ministerio de Salud analyses, and monitoring tied to targets from Pan American Health Organization cancer control plans. Evaluation collaborations include academic impact assessments conducted with Universidad de Chile and Universidad de Valparaíso.
Category:Non-profit organizations based in Chile Category:Medical and health organizations in Chile