"It was really bad – we had patients dying on the waiting lists – politicians were getting desperate."
Jesper Fisker, chief executive of the Danish Cancer Society, is looking back 25 years - to the moment Denmark decided to transform its approach to treating cancer.
At that point, he says, the country did not have a strong record.
"It was a disaster. We saw Danish patients out of their own pocket paying for tickets to China to get all sorts of treatments – endangering their health."
Some went to private hospitals in Germany that offered new treatments unavailable in Denmark.
Back then, Denmark's record on cancer was low compared to other rich countries. But so was the UK's.
From 1995 to 1999, Denmark's five-year survival rate for rectal cancer was essentially tied with the UK's, on around 48%, according to the International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership, a research body. It put both nations well below countries like Australia, which had a 59% rate.
Now, thanks to a bold plan, Denmark's performance on cancer has jumped ahead.






