All.Can International’s new Case Study Compendium documents what that looks like in practice accompanying our global report Implementing Person-Centred Cancer Care to Improve Outcomes, Experiences and Efficiency.

From Sweden’s nationally mandated care pathways to Brazil’s mobile CT lung screening units. From the Philippines’ national policy protecting people with cancer from financial hardship to peer navigation programmes eliminating health inequities in Canada. Each case study shows what works, why it works, and what it takes to replicate it.

The evidence is unambiguous: when care is coordinated, timely and built around what people with cancer actually need, it reduces waste, cuts unnecessary hospitalisations and drives better outcomes. Person-centred care is a system sustainability strategy.

On 2 June, we brought this evidence to the European Parliament in Brussels. With the 2028 to 2034 EU budget in active preparation and Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan under assessment, the question before policymakers is urgent: what must the European Union commit to in order to make person-centred, efficient cancer care a named investment priority?

Read the compendium and full report here: