NIAMEY, Niger -- Niger has
stepped up the fight against breast and cervical cancer, using screening and
public awareness campaigns to reverse a scourge affecting more and more women
in the prime of life.
"The situation in Niger is
very alarming," said oncologist Issimouha Dille. "Breast and
cervical cancer are serious public health The World Health Organization (WHO)
says some 8,000 new cancer cases are recorded each year in the poor Sahel
country with a life expectancy of 56 years.
More than a quarter of the cases
— 27 percent — are breast cancer, followed by cervical cancer, which accounts
for 14 percent of cases, according to hospital statistics.
Dille, who heads the
humanitarian group SOS-Cancer, said ignorance and poverty impeded efforts to
address the problem. "Especially deep in the countryside, women suffer
in silence," viewing cancer as an "evil spell," Dille said.
A humanitarian official added:
"In the absence of medical care, sufferers consult witch doctors and
often die in their huts."
Dille said screening for the two
forms of cancer has previously been aimed at women between 50 and 60 years of
age, but that today clinics are seeing patients aged 35 and even younger.
"A woman who is still
active can succumb to ill health because we don't have the means to treat
her," she said. "This woman will die."
When "a portion of the
active population, which helps the country develop, when this portion dies,
what will we do? There will be no development," Dille said.
With the help of international
partners such as the WHO, the former French colony has decided to give
priority to prevention efforts.
"We can prevent cervical
cancer by screening," Dille said, noting that the test costs less than 6
euros (US$6.5) per patient.
Treatment costs are astronomical
in comparison "when we account for the surgery, radiation, chemotherapy
— with little chance of recovery, I might add," she said.
Last month SOS-Cancer carried
out a public awareness campaign in several towns, offering free screening to
more than 500 women, a number of whom it said tested positive.
In 2014, the government launched
a free program to vaccinate girls between nine and 13 against cervical
cancer, reaching more than 19,000 girls, most in the capital Niamey.
The pilot project will soon be
extended to the whole country, with Health Minister Mano Aghali stressing on
national television that the vaccine offers lifelong protection.
A radiation therapy center is
under construction in Niamey with support from the International Atomic
Energy Agency.
Currently, most cancer patients
have access only to palliative care, with only a "handful" of
Nigeriens able to afford the prohibitive cost of seeking treatment abroad, a
hospital source told AFP.
The message that screening is a
"necessity" is one that SOS-Cancer is trying to spread nationwide
through television and radio broadcasts in local languages.
Posters with pictures of cancer
patients who have had a breast or a limb removed hang in a variety of public
places, as well as outside pharmacies.
Married at 15
"If the ravages of cancer
are added to a high birthrate and endemic food crises, the impacts may be
unsustainable for Niger," one of the world's poorest countries, Dille
said.
Girls often marry at an
extremely young age and Niger's culture encourages large families, with the
current average standing at 7.6 children per family.
Two in three girls are married by age 15, and a girl or woman dies
every two hours from complications linked to pregnancy or childbirth,
according to the U.N. Population Fund in Niamey.
"The only advice I can give
to my sisters is that if they ever have cancer, they should not go to the
witch doctor," said a cancer patient who gave her name only as Aicha.
"They should come quickly
to a health center before the disease develops. Cancer is a hidden illness
that we don't see, it develops on the inside and defeats its victim."
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Wednesday, 21 October 2015
FIGHT AGAINST CANCER IN THE NATION OF NIGER
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