[EDITORIAL] Close The Cancer Care Gap

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The international community on February 4, marked World Cancer Day. It is a day set aside by the United Nations/World Health Organization, WHO, to raise

Over 100,000 Nigerians are diagnosed with cancer annually, and about 80,000 die with a dismal survival rate of 1: 5. The situation is worse for some specific cancers. For example, the survival rate for certain blood cancers in Nigeria is 1:20 whilst at the Tata Cancer Centre in the Indian city of Mumbai, survivorship is 99:100 for the same condition. This poor survival rate in Nigeria is mainly due to inadequate infrastructure for cancer care and lack of well-organized system of prevention.

A Mobile Cancer Centre is not the same as a Mobile Mammogram. Rather, it is a clinic on wheels with state-of-the-art facilities for screening, follow-up and treatment including surgeries for pre-cancer and early cancer cases. It also contains facilities for screening against ten cancer-related killer diseases, including hepatitis, diabetes, malaria, HIV/AIDs and others. Thus, the Mobile Cancer Centres would tackle the double burden of disease, i.e., Communicable & Non-Communicable.

Nigeria has no Mobile Cancer Centres ; therefore, most Nigerians have no access to basic cancer screening. Likewise, Nigeria has no single Comprehensive Cancer Centre ; therefore, most Nigerians have no access to optimal cancer treatment.

 

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