Opinion

October is Breast Cancer Campaign Month, All Must Join

The month of October is here again and as accustomed to the month, it is a period of drawing attention to breast cancer disease; rallying support for early detection, treatment as well as palliative care of the disease.

The month is symbolized by color pink to express support for women suffering from breast cancer which is by far the most common cancer in women worldwide, both in developed and in developing countries.

The disease which develops in the breast tissue with signs including lump in the breast, a change in breast shape, dimpling of the skin, fluid coming from the nipple, and a red or scaly patch of the skin, is said to kill about 458,000 women each year.

Majority of these deaths (269,000) are said to occur in low middle income countries, where most women with breast cancer are diagnosed in late stages due mainly to lack of awareness on early detection and barriers to health services.

In Ghana, the National Strategy for Cancer Control programme (2014-2017) indicates that seven out of 10 women diagnosed with breast cancer each year will die from the disease compared to two out of 10 women in developing countries like United State of America.

A latest report released by the International Agency for Research on Cancer states that breast cancer cases have risen from a little over 2,900 in 2012 to more than 4,600 in 2018, with 1,800 women likely to lose their lives to the disease.

Indeed, there is a rising trend of young girls between ages 13 to 20 contracting the disease in the country which hitherto was diagnosed among women 43 years and above.

Currently, there is not sufficient knowledge con the causes of breast cancer, however, available data points to the fact that limited access to timely diagnoses and treatment are largely accountable for the rise in deaths.

It is in this vein that the Ghana Times takes a serious view on the need to intensify public sensitization, particularly in rural and peri-urban areas on the disease which remains a major public health threat.

There are still a lot of superstitious perception surrounding the disease with women seeking healing and assistance from prayer camps, herbalists and resorting to all kinds of self-medication, rather than reporting early to a health facility upon noticing abnormality on the breast.

The fear of stigmatization or public ridicule, with husbands reportedly abandoning their wives because of the disease still hangs on and that is why we must accelerate efforts to reverse the situation and save the lives of many innocent women and girls.

Early detection of breast cancer remains key in managing and controlling the disease and we cannot relent in empowering women to detect early symptoms of breast cancer for prompt treatment.

The World Health Organization (WHO) encourages countries to put in place comprehensive breast cancer control programmes as part of National Cancer Control Plans, to tackle the disease and we appeal to the government to take immediate steps to bridge geographical and financial gaps in access to treatment.

As it stands now, treatment which is mainly by surgery, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy in few hospitals are mainly located in urban centers and inaccessible to most women with the disease as the National Health Insurance Card only caters for a little percentage of cost of treatment for the disease.

The Ghana Health Service and Ministry of Health most endeavor to implement the right policies that will ensure effective treatment of breast cancers across the country as it strives to achieve universal health courage.

Also of importance, is that husbands must provide the needed support to their wives in case they test positive for the disease because that is the period they are needed most to ensure a successful treatment process.

We must all join the cause to prevent breast cancer.  

Source: Ghanaian Times   

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