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Advances in cancer screening, diagnosis and treatment have vastly improved overall cancer survival. New research discoveries, technologies and evidence-based care are extending lives and improving the quality of life for people affected by cancer. Despite these advances, cancer remains a major health problem and leading cause of death in Australia, with one in two Australians expected to develop cancer in their lifetime, and one in five dying from the disease. In Queensland alone, there are approximately 33,000 cancer diagnoses and more than 9,700 deaths from cancer every year.
Health Translation Queensland’s (HTQ) has released a Queensland Cancer Research and Translation Funding Analysis Report March 2023 (Cancer Funding Analysis 2023). The report is a comprehensive analysis of federal research funding that is awarded to cancer research bodies in Queensland. The report also includes an analysis of Queensland’s cancer clinical trial activity, and cancer incidence and mortality rates in Queensland.
The Cancer Funding Analysis 2023 follows on from HTQ’s Health and Medical Research Funding Analysis Report, released in April 2022, which outlines the state of play in health and medical research funding in Queensland generally, and Queensland’s position in relation to other states. It found that Queensland is not receiving an equitable share of Commonwealth health research funding.
The Cancer Funding Analysis 2023 is also accompanied by a more detailed Queensland Cancer Research and Translation Capability Overview 2023 that showcases Queensland’s cancer research and translation capabilities through a statewide snapshot of examples.
The report reconfirmed Queensland’s strengths in discovery research and world-class, pre-clinical cancer models. It also found that Queensland has significant capabilities across a number of cancer research areas and across the spectrum of cancer patients’ journeys, with the data suggesting that Queensland researchers and/or clinicians are leaders in survivorship, symptom management and palliative care, followed by prevention and diagnosis trials.
The release of these documents is timely: An understanding of the state’s cancer research capabilities will position Queensland well to implement the 10-year Australian Cancer Plan developed by Cancer Australia.
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Health Translation Queensland acknowledges the Traditional Owners and their custodianship of the lands on which we live, work, and play. We pay our respects to their Ancestors and their Descendants, who continue cultural and spiritual connections to Country. We recognise their valuable contributions to Australian and global society.