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Women's Healthcare Q3 2023

Making journeys easier for women after cancer treatment

Happy cancer patient embracing her friend who is visiting her at home.
Happy cancer patient embracing her friend who is visiting her at home.
iStock / Getty Images Plus / Drazen Zigic

Yvonne O’Meara

Systemic Psychotherapist, UCD Women’s Cancer
Survivorship Research Coordinator, Irish Cancer Society

The Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) began in 2020 as a project aiming to improve overall health and wellbeing for women following a cancer diagnosis.


A first-of-its-kind project for Ireland supported by the Irish Cancer Society, the WHI is based across three locations nationwide in Dublin (Mater Misericordiae University Hospital, St Vincent’s University Hospital and the National Maternity Hospital), Cork (Cork University Hospital) and Galway (University Hospital Galway). 

Initiatives and studies 

As well as offering access to in-hospital clinics and virtual support for the many complex — yet often unaddressed — issues facing women during and after their cancer treatment, the WHI includes a range of innovative studies focused on specifically identified areas of need. We hope that it will eventually lead to the development of a national programme for cancer survivors.  

In the WHI’s Dublin team led by Prof Donal Brennan, Professor of Gynaecological Oncology at UCD, this involves studies into the effects of menopause after cancer; how women’s sleep is impacted after treatment; and our Diagnosis Delivery Project, which sees all newly diagnosed patients who attend a gynaecological clinic receive a business card with details of their diagnosis, treating doctor and nurse on it, along with an image of where the cancer is. 

We hope that it will eventually lead to the development
of a national programme for cancer survivors.

Customisable platform 

Another novel aspect of the WHI has been the development of the thisisGO.ie platform. Its primary objective is to provide relevant, reliable information to patients and survivors of gynaecological cancers and related genetic conditions.  

It is a multimedia platform available for five cancers: cervical, ovarian, uterine, vulvar, vaginal and two inherited cancer predisposition syndromes: BRCA and Lynch Syndrome. Healthcare professionals can also create their own specialised profiles on the platform. 

As per the needs identified by patients consulted by the project team, thisisGO.ie provides the following: 

  • An individualised, blended platform, including over 300 pieces of written information material and 40 videos, podcasts and patient stories, allowing users to develop a bespoke profile based on where they are on their journey from diagnosis, to surveillance and recurrence 
  • A national directory of services for Irish women living with and after gynaecological cancer 
  • A symptom tracker  
  • A ‘decoding the science’ section describing seminal trial results 

The platform has over 100 collaborators including national and international experts, all of whom donated their resources and time free of charge. These innovations can help make life during and after cancer easier to manage for women, specific to their personal needs. 

To enquire about the programme, or if you are a patient or public member who would like to get involved, contact Yvonne O’Meara at [email protected] 

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