Richard Sullivan: Why therapeutic geographies of cancer are so important
Richard Sullivan shared on X/Twitter:
“Why therapeutic geographies of cancer are so important: deprivation, rurality access to cancer care. A case study of prostate cancer in the English NHS.”
Additional information.
Source: Richard Sullivan/X
Richard Sullivan is a Professor of Cancer and Global Health at King’s College London, and Director of the King’s Institute of Cancer Policy and co-Director of the Conflict and Health Research Group. His research interests extend from global cancer to conflict & health. He has worked on a number of Lancet and Lancet Oncology commissions, currently the Lancet Commission on Global Diagnostics and the Lancet Oncology European Cancer Research Commission. Dr. Sullivan’s work contributes to capacity building in conflict and health, and humanitarian medicine, particularly in the Middle East and North Africa, as well as programs in women’s health and cancer, digital innovation and a wide range of global health security project. He is an NCD advisor to the WHO, a member of the National Cancer Grid of India and advisor (civil-military) to Save the Children.
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