Background: With the growing burden of Women cancers in East Africa, integrating cancer screening and avoidance to enhance horizontal care shipment designs is a paramount technique to reinforcing cost-efficient and women-centered main health care. EMPOWER is a distinct collaboration with the government of Kenya, County recommendation medical facilities, County First Ladies Association, International Cancer Institute, Patient companies and Roche Kenya to demonstrate integrated cancer prevention and treatment within primary healthcare shared throughout the Kenyan Health system. Approaches: EMPOWER clinics were introduced with over 300 community health employees (including women coping with specials needs) and HCPs were identified and trained to supply center and community-based screening and early detection for breast cancer, cervical cancer, high blood pressure and diabetes through an integrated health systems enhancing technique. Mentorship was supplied to HCPs through regularly held joint screenings and clinics, weekly Tumor Boards, Teleclinics, Telemedicine and Digital Pathology platforms. In addition, training assistance was offered through virtual preceptorships, skills-training workshops, hub-and-spoke oncological services provision and robust patient navigation. Results: 14 EMPOWER centers have actually been released across Kenya to increase community awareness of breast, cervical, and NCDs, reinforce capacity to deliver integrated Women cancer management services in County health clinics. In Kenya out of 25,502 people evaluated, 13,192 were screened for breast cancer with 97 abnormal findings determined; 10,349 screened for cervical cancer with 200 abnormal cervical screenings determined and 1,664 screened for prostate cancer with 32 abnormal findings. In addition, an integrated approach in Non Communicable Disease (NCD) hypertension, diabetes and care screening; 4,298 screened for diabetes and 6,116 screened for high blood pressure. All those detected with cancers were connected to existing cancer care shipment systems and continuous support offered through the strengthened healthcare systems. Prostate cancer was included as more men turned up for screening events. Conclusions: This model is scalable and replicable throughout LMIC and just recently the model motivated health providers from Tanzania and Nigeria to adopt the same for ladiess cancers. EMPOWER has shown a scalable care model in Kenya adding to financial investments in pathology training and scientific treatment to enhance difficulties in recommendations and updating standards to allow multi-disease tissue testing and handling and treatment with Standard of Care.Public Private Partnership.This material was initially released here.