The prevalence of cancer related ailment in the
country is disturbingly on the increase as Nigerians are reported to be
spending over $200million, an equivalent of N40 billion annually, on medical
tourism.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO),
over 100,000 Nigerians are diagnosed with cancer annually, and about 80,000 die
from the disease. This amounts to 240 Nigerians every day or 10 Nigerians every
hour, dying from cancer related ailments. The Nigerian cancer death ratio of 4
in 5 is one of the worst in the world.
“Painfully radiotherapy
which is one of the essential treatments needed to manage cases of cancer is
unavailable in most tertiary hospitals in Nigeria. Only four public hospitals
and one private hospital have such facilities in Nigeria, and at the moment
some of these are not functional,” Abia Nzelu, executive secretary, Committee
Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy (CECP-Nigeria) said.
It is also reported that Nigeria has no Mobile
Cancer Centres (MCC); therefore, most Nigerians have no access to basic cancer
screening. Likewise, Nigeria has no Comprehensive
Cancer Centre (CCC); therefore, most Nigerians have no access to optimal cancer
treatment.
A Comprehensive Cancer Centre costs about $63
million, while a Mobile Cancer Centre costs about $600,000.
Interestingly, Nigerians spend $200 million annually
on treatment abroad. Curiously, $200 million is the approximate amount needed
to establish three Comprehensive Cancer Centres or acquire 300 Mobile Cancer
Centres. “Unfortunately, the
outcome for Nigerians who embark on cancer-related medical tourism is often
poor, because of late detection.
Cancer constitutes a preventable major drain on our
human and financial resources. World Cancer Day (February 4 every year) is set
aside by the United Nations (UN)/WHO to raise awareness of cancer and to
encourage its prevention, detection, and treatment.
The theme for World Cancer Day 2015 is ‘Not Beyond
Us,’ which takes a positive and proactive approach to the fight against cancer,
highlighting that solutions do exist and that they are within our reach.
Regrettably, “more than 40 per cent of cancer occurs
in women. Breast and cervical cancer are the commonest forms of cancer and they
occur in women. “Cancer can happen to anyone but it does not have to be a death
sentence if it is detected early,” Aderemi Ajekigbe, Professor of Radiotherapy
and Oncology, College of Medicine, University of Lagos said.
Jennifer Smith, Executive Director Cervical Cancer
Free Coalition, explained that, “Cervical cancer is a preventable ailment, yet
we are still seeing so many deaths around the world. At Cervical Cancer Free
Coalition we are working towards building networks across the globe to help
support our common goal of a world free of cervical cancer.”
There is no running away from the fact that cancer
is a global epidemic. In 2010 it became the number one killer disease of
mankind. One out of every three persons is diagnosed with cancer in their
lifetime. The worldwide burden of cancer doubled between 1975 and 2000 and is
set to double again by 2020 and nearly triple by 2030. It is projected that by
2030, one in every two persons will be diagnosed of cancer in their lifetime.
Even though it is reported that deaths from infectious
diseases like HIV/AIDS will decline by seven million yearly, such is not the
case with cancer. Report holds that 70 percent of cancer deaths take place in
developing nations like Nigeria.
The truth is that the global incidence of cancer is
soaring and death rates are higher in Nigeria because cancer patients are
usually poor and they have little access to treatment in the country,” Ajekigbe
said, adding that, “at every time, there are only four functioning radiotherapy
machines in the country, others may have broken down due to the high patient
load on it. Patients who can afford it will travel out when they can no longer
wait for the machines to start working while the poor patients suffer in
silence.”
WHO report states that, one- third of all cancers
can be prevented; another one- third can be effectively cured with early
diagnosis, and palliative care can improve the quality of life of the last
third.
Ebunola Anozie, CEO, Care Organisation Public
Enlightenment (COPE), says: “We are aware that one out of every 12 women will
have breast cancer. A woman’s choice about the way she lives can help lower the
risk of developing breast cancer. Public awareness about cancer should be
increased. This should extend not only to the health sector but agriculture,
sports, education, women affairs and poverty alleviation, information and
industry”.
The war against cancer is designed to establish the
infrastructure for efficient and effective cancer prevention and treatment in
Nigeria. CECP’s operational partner for the war is the National Cancer
Prevention Programme (NCPP). The goal of the war is to acquire and deploy 37
Mobile Cancer Centres (MCC), one for each state and FCT Abuja; these will take
cancer prevention and early treatment to the grassroots, by energizing the
impact of NCPP. As a longer-term goal, the CECP is committed to spearheading
the establishment of one Comprehensive Cancer Centre (CCC) in each of Nigeria’s
geopolitical zones.
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