Tag: cancer

  • Group enlightens pupils on cancer

    Pupils from various secondary schools in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, gathered for a breast cancer workshop organised by the Breast Cancer Association of Nigeria (BRECAN) Ibadan last weekend.

    The workshop, which took place at BRECAN Center, was attended by pupils from The Vale College; Lead City High School; George and Duke College and All Saint College, Ibadan.

    They learnt about breast cancer, its causes and implication.

    One of the speakers, Dr Charles Okuofo, a radiologist and oncologist at the Usman Dan Fodio University Teaching hospital (UDUTH), spoke of the importance of self breast examination.

    “Self breast examination has been proven to reduce breast cancer. In doing the self-examination, one needs to check for any sign of dimpling, swelling, puckering, bulging, nipple change, soreness and any abnormal discharge from the breast and around the breast region.  He also cautioned on the need to start the treatment early, saying,”breast cancer is both curable if detected early and also preventable”.

    Dr Ademola, an expert on breast cancer from the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, also counseled the pupils to watch what they consume as obesity is also a major cause of breast cancer.

    “Weight control, diet and consistent exercise are some of the ways to control and prevent breast cancer,” he said.

    Explaining why the workshop targeted young people, President and founder of BRECAN, Mrs Betty Anyanwu Akeredolu, said it would prepare them to be advocates against the disease.

    “We organised it because we discovered we can harness the youth to advance the cause of breast cancer advocacy in Nigeria and to get women and the entire populace to get to know what breast cancer is and how to fight it.

    “We believe the children can be used as a tool to penetrate each family and sensitise them on the need to pay attention to this deadly disease.  The workshop, we believe, will groom them so that they can come up with their own ideas and plan to fight breast cancer in their respective schools and environment and whatever they do BRECAN is there to support them,” she said.

    The participants were treated to a computer session on how to take the breast cancer advocacy to their social media accounts.

    One of the participants, a pupil of The Vale College, Bukunmi Olanrewaju, expressed happiness about what she learnt.

    “I learnt that every lump is not cancerous, which I did not know before, and that early treatment is very key to treating breast cancer,” she said

  • ‘Ignorance, herbs worsened my cancer’

    •More awareness needed on breast cancer

    The world of a 46-year-old, mother of two, Mrs Joke Adeolu (not real name), was beautiful until 1983. Before then, she was full of life. Her marriage too was blissful until she delivered her second child that year.

    Recounting how her plight began, she said: “When I was breastfeeding my second baby, I felt something in my breast.  When I touched it, it was hard like a lump. I was asking myself what it was.”

    So, Mrs Adeolu went to the General Hospital, Marina, Lagos, where she was delivered of her baby.

    The doctor gave her some antibiotics and asked her to come back the following week. When she got home, she told one of her friends who encouraged her to go to a herbs seller (Elewe Omo) at Oyingbo, a suburb of Lagos for cure.

    Her aunt, a trained midwife, also advised her not to go back to the hospital, fearing that the doctors might ‘severe’ her breast to stop the lump from growing.

    Mrs Adeolu said she sought advice from another friend who also encouraged her to get herbs at Oyingbo than see a medical doctor.

    “I obliged and I went to Oyingbo Market. The woman I met at Ori eru, gave me some herbs to boil and soap to wash my breasts the next day. I did.

    “But rather than my condition improving, the skin on my breast started to peel off and mucus began to come out. It became very painful. My dress could not touch the breast skin without me feeling a terrible pain,” she stated.

    Mrs Adeolu said she decided to see the doctor again when she started having uncontrollable pain in her left breast.

    “So, on the third day, I went back to the hospital, the doctor asked me why I didn’t follow his prescriptions, that it was to ameliorate the pain. He further examined me, that there was nothing he could do about it, except removal; that it was obvious it was cancer. That it is beyond drug.  Then I started crying.  When a senior nurse who was working in the hospital came and saw me crying, she asked what the matter was and I showed her my breast. She was very sad and left me to prepare the theatre for surgery. Then, I went in and the lump was removed,” she said.

    She didn’t ask further questions about her condition after that. “I don’t know anything about cancer either. So, I went back home, but on the third day, I returned to the hospital for the dressing of the wound.

    “After that, I travelled to where I was based.”

    She said the problem reocurred in August 2008.

    Said Mrs Adeola: “I felt something in my left breast, again. So, I went to the General Hospital, Marina. But the going and coming was more than I could bear. However, in January 2009, the doctors agreed to remove the lump. And it was eventually removed.”

    She said some tests were carried out on the lump which revealed it was cancerous.

    “After three weeks, I went back to see the doctor and he told me the lump was cancerous,” Mrs. Adeolu said.

    She said the oncologist told her he would to remove the whole breast, adding: “Any time I come to the hospital, my blood pressure will rise up. I will be afraid to go back home. This made the doctor to talk to me in May, 2009, that I should take things easy so that the blood pressure (BP) can reduce before surgery.

    “After that I did the surgery. And then did chemotherapy and radiotherapy.  Now, I am better but it was a harrowing experience.”

    The Coordinator of Bristow Uplift, an arm of Bristow Airways,  Mayowa Babatunde, said his organisation was partnering with SCC to reduce breast cancer and other cancers, especially in women.

    The company, he said, collaborated with Sebeccly Cancer Care (SCC) to give succour to women.

    The partnership, he said, is an intervention of some sort to help women. It involves free breast and cervical cancer screening, among others.

    “This is because breast cancer is still considered a death sentence in Nigeria. This should not be. We want to help save more lives. So, it is Bristow’s charitable giving programme through which it intervene in the society,” Babatunde said.

  • All for cancer

    The rising cases of breast cancer, the high death rate, the urgency to support breast cancer patients and the need to improve on strategies to control breast cancer have motivated a clinician and radiation oncologist, Dr. Lola Salako, to found a multi-purpose cancer group, Sebeccly Cancer Care (SCC).

    According to Dr Salako, through collaboration of cancer stakeholders and coordination and promotion of cancer services, a lot can be done for the benefit of patients.

    To realise a seamless synergy, the organisation held its maiden, Light Lagos Pink campaign. It was also to create awareness, access and encourage women to take action against breast cancer.

    It was held at Muri Okunola Park, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    Present at the event were Chairman, National Cancer Consultative Forum, Prof Durosinmi Etti; Country Manager, Roche, Hemman Addae; Permanent Secretary, Ministry Of Environment, Engr Hakeem Ogunbambi; Dr Salako; Special Advisor to Governor on Public Health, Dr Yewande Adesina; representative of the First Lady of Lagos State, Mrs Azeezat Tijani; Patron, Sebeccly Cancer Care, Prof J.T.K Duncan and Board member, Sebeccly Cancer Care Mrs A.C Omojole at the event.

    According to Dr. Salako, the Light Lagos Pink campaign will hold annually, to ensure proper information is being circulated in Lagos state on breast cancer, nay throughout the country.

    She said: “In the light of this, the campaign has an active social media platform and breast help lines to attend to breast health enquiries. With the collaborative effort of Lagos state Ministries of Health, Environment, Laspark and LASAA, Sebeccly Cancer Care has decorated four public parks- Muri Okunola Park, Ojota Park, Outer Marina and M.K.O Abiola park and mounted breast awareness billboards.

    “A significant part of the campaign is fund raising; to support cancer patients who cannot afford the cost of treatment therefore a fundraising drive is in place. It is tagged Light Lagos Pink Fridays. We want people, groups and organisations o pick any Friday in October, wear Pink, organise a fundraising event and donate to the campaign: ‘Turn Lagos Pink’, in this breast cancer awareness month and support thousands of women waking up to the harsh reality of breast cancer every day. Whether you raise N 1,000 or N 500,000; every kobo counts and you will help someone through one of the most difficult challenges they’ll ever face. Every year our access to cancer care schemes, support group and educational material help thousands of women facing breast cancer”.

    She said willing participants can connect and share breast cancer awareness messages via www.facebook.com/sebeccly; purchase ‘Light Lagos Pink™’ merchandise at www.dealdey.com/cancer+awareness; champion a ‘Light Lagos Pink™’ Friday at work,  home or school; wear pink on any Friday in October; hold an event, raise funds and donate to Sebeccly cancer care and support centre; upload your pink pictures to facebook and other social media and like our facebook page.”

    Dr Salako said people can also, “Join us at a ‘Light Lagos Pink™’ event https://www.facebook.com/sebeccly/events; donate online https://234give.com/cause/light-lagos-pink or bank transfer GTB, Sebeccly Cancer Care and Support Centre, 0010849209; book a discounted taxi from Easy Taxi  quoting the unique code “Light Lagos Pink”; pick a discounted mammogram voucher from a Sebeccly Light Lagos Pink stand or request via email at lightlagospink@sebecclycancercare.org and also invite us to a female gathering to educate and screen women for breast cancer.”

    She assured that donations received will help in these ways: N1, 000 per month can offer five survivors access to inspirational survivor stories through telephone support.N 2,000 monthly can provide a free copy of ‘The informed breast cancer patient’ book, that helps a newly diagnosed patient navigate cancer care in Nigeria. Top of FormBottom of Form N5,000/month pays to provide a survivor visit and counseling session to three newly diagnosed patients at home. Top of FormBottom of Form N 8,000/month can improve the capacity of the Sebeccly cancer research team. N10,000/month can provide 12 cancer patients with a tool to keep important documents organised and information to help guide their cancer experience. N15,000/month can match five women to free mammogram services at a Light Lagos Pink partner hospital. N35,000/month can help one patient receive one course of chemotherapy through the Sebeccly chemo access at Luth; N55, 000/month can help one patient have breast cancer surgery through the Sebeccly Mastectomy initiative at the General Hospital, Lagos. N100,000/month can provide 10 breast prosthesis to 10 women, to help regain their femininity.”

    The Chairman of the occasion, Dr. Yewande Adesina, said the efforts of the Lagos State Government in combating breast cancer, a pilot model cancer screening centre will be launched in a Primary Health Centre (PHC) shortly and will be replicated across 57 PHCs to encourage women to access cancer screening and guide treatment process.

  • How we beat cancer, by survivors

    Cancer is no respecter of persons. To survive it, knowledge is central, said the three survivors NNEKA NWANERI met at the “Go Pink benefit concert and fund raising dinner” in Lagos, organised by the Optimal Cancer Care Foundation.

    MRS Olayinka Adeyemo, a cancer survivor, fainted when she was initially diagnosed of breast cancer at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi Araba, in May, last year.

    She is alive today, telling her story, ‘in order to encourage other patients that cancer is not the end of life.’

    Mrs Adeyemo, a 54-year-old security consultant, said she noticed a lump in her right breast and visited LUTH, where oncologists, specialists in cancer treatment, said it was cancerous.

    She said: “I fainted when I got the report.”

    The mother of four said: “I visited LUTH again. The doctors said my breast will be removed. I was so scared. It was not easy hearing that one’s breast will be severed. But, I was told it was the only option available and I was terrified.”

    She said she could have died if she had gone for a surgery immediately without proper counselling.

    Then, one Thursday, while watching television, she heard the Managing Director of Optical Cancer Care, Dr. Femi Olaleye, saying cancer is not a death sentence, that people can live through it.

    This information gave her hope.

    She said: “I went to his outreach centre the following Friday. He counselled me that I should have the surgery.”

    Describing the situation, Mrs Adeyemo said: “It was like hell was let loose. When I got home. I told my husband and children. They all re-echoed what Dr Olaleye told me and even re-affirmed that I would not die. I held on to what they said and began the treatment. But, it was not easy. It is better imagined than experienced. I cannot even describe the three months treatment. It took some time for me to agree to have a surgery, let alone chemotherapy and radiotherapy treatment. Chemotherapy was monthly. I have had the therapy for eight months since the surgery. Radiotherapy lasted six weeks. But I was determined to survive it.”

    Last August, she had her breast removed to stop the cancer from spreading. “I am presently undergoing chemotherapy. Everything has gone as normal but the only challenge I have is that the process is very expensive,” she stated.

    Mrs Adeyemo, who also runs  Calvary Centre and Eye Centre, which is a non-governmental organisation (NGO) in Offa, Kwara State, decried the mindset of most women who have not been going for checkups as terrible.

    She said: “Cancer is unique and differs from one person to the other. Some people find it in different parts of the breast. For me, I did not find any lump. I just noticed that during my ovulation, I experienced pains under my breasts. It took me time to know because I thought cancer was painless.”

    Though she was diagnosed in May last year, she feels on top of the world ‘having undergone surgery and declared cancer free. She advised women to always go for screening instead of sitting at home thinking it is juju that has turned to sickness. “That culture here is bad. I encourage women above 40 to go for  breast and cervical cancer screenings. I have finished my treatment. I’m so strong and great and I am optimistic about the future,” Mrs Adeyemo said.

    For Abigail Simon-Hart, a health consultant, it was a different story. She was diagnosed of breast cancer in 1980 and had a double mastectomy.

    She said: “Mastectomy is the surgery to remove all tissue from the breast to stop the cancer. For those with early-stage breast cancer, mastectomy may be a treatment option. Breast-conserving surgery (lumpectomy), in which only the tumor is removed from the breast, may be another option. Deciding between mastectomy and lumpectomy can be difficult. Both procedures are equally effective. But lumpectomy is not an option for everyone with breast cancer; some prefer to undergo a mastectomy.”

    “I am very breast cancer aware. I began yearly mammograms from the age of 28 and had yearly breast ultrasounds in addition to the mammograms from the age of 40, as my breast was very dense. I first had a cancer scare in 1993 when I had a lump in my right breast. A lumpectomy revealed a benign (non cancerous) mass. But I was properly diagnosed with breast cancer in April.

    “The cancer was at stage 1, in the right breast and DCIS in the left. DCIS is considered the earliest form of breast cancer. DCIS is noninvasive; meaning it hasn’t spread out of the milk duct to invade other parts of the breast. It was also the kind of cancer not in a defined lump. I decided to have a double mastectomy. Two weeks earlier, I had a premonition about having breast cancer and I made the decision then that if I came down with breast cancer I would remove both breasts.”

    When asked about her husband’s reaction on removal of her two breasts, she said: “I think there is too much emphasis on what spouses or partners think. It’s my conviction that if your marriage or relationship is held together by your breasts, then you need to re-evaluate your relationships. My family has been really supportive.”

    Explaining how she was able to go through the treatment, she said it was God. She described the period as “a difficult time”.

    “My strength comes from God.  I don’t know what I would have done without my faith. In the hospital, I saw many cancer patients who felt life was pointless and were hopeless. God made me realise that I have a purpose. Now I am able to comfort others who have the same problem. I share the the comfort that God gave me with them. The strength God blessed me with during that period was amazing. I still have a long road ahead. But my two sons – Jonathan and Daniel – remain my reason to keep fighting.”

    Mrs Simon-Hart said further: “Once a person is diagnosed with cancer, I think regrets are futile. I’m thankful for the second chance at life God has given. I’m only looking forward now. I will advise women to know that breast cancer is real and can be beaten.

    “The reason I’m standing here with hope for a long life is due to regular screening and the expertise of the radiologist, who caught the cancer in time. I will suggest that women should examine their breasts regularly and if they have a family history of breast cancer like I do, they should tell their doctor and get a mammogram to get a baseline which can be compared for changes in the future.”

    In the same vein, a teacher, Amaka Chinweze, said it is one thing to have cancer and another  to have the money to treat it. She was forced into early retirement because of the ailment.

    Her first surgery cost N500,000. For the chemotherapy, which involves  only one of the drugs, she spent N50,000.

    Mrs Chinweze said: “I have been able to cope with the help of my relations; my elder sister has been trying for me. It has been very tough and I don’t know how I will do the next chemotherapy because I have no penny on me because chemotherapy is not what you start and stop. It has to be constant and it must be on a monthly basis.

    “Cancer is real but unimaginable; people don’t want to hear of it. It is very expensive. The cost implication is not what to talk about. Every day, I thank God. I feel a lot better since I had the operation but I’ve been restless trying to keep up with the chemotherapy. It is driving me into depression. I pray God sees me through.”

    She said: “I will advise women to go for screening which is the most vital. If the ailment is discovered in time, it will save a lot. If it is diagnosed as cancer, God will make a way financially. But never give up or attempt ending your life. There is life after cancer.”

    Amaka’s sister, Mrs Omoregini called on the government to assist with finance, especially for those undergoing the treatment. There are also fake drugs about. It’s not everyone that can afford more than N100,000 monthly. Market women and traders can’t keep up.

    She said: “I bought drugs at Alpha Pharmacy, Ikeja, but a doctor at LUTH said it was a fake. I took it back to the pharmacy and they refused to take it back. The government should do for cancer what it did for AIDS, Polio and Ebola. It should also come to the aid of citizens and help them instead of leaving them to their fate.”

  • Foundation battles breast cancer in Kwara

    Foundation battles breast cancer in Kwara

    Worried by the incessant cases of cervical and breast cancers and their debilitating effects on women, th wife of Kwara State Governor, Mrs. Omolewa Ahmed, has led members of the LEAH Foundation, a non- governmental organisation (NGO), to campaign against the ailments. Members of the foundation took to the streets and some communities in the state to sensitise women on the harmful effects of the diseases.

    The campaigns, during which leaflets were distributed, began at the foundation’s GRA office in Ilorin, the state capital. They visited the Ero-Omo Primary Health Centre and the Egbejila Primary Health Centre, both in Ilorin West and Ilorin South local government areas.

    Mrs. Ahmed, the founder of the NGO, advocated periodic breast and cervical screening for early detection and treatment of the diseases.

    She urged women to use the facilities which the foundation had provided to ensure that they are free from the ailments, adding that breast and cervical cancers do not respect any one, irrespective of her class or status. She noted that all sexually active women are susceptible to the diseases.

    Mrs. Ahmed allayed any fear of financial constraints in accessing the facility, saying the centres in their respective areas would charge a token of N200 which, she said is the fee for speculum, an apparatus with which the screening is conducted. She added that the speculum could only be used on one person.

    She said: “I advise women to make maximum use of the opportunity. We are just starting. We hope to have screening centres in all nook and cranny of the state.

    “I encourage all our women that have been screened to go out there and talk to others about the 16 centres we have already established. With concerted effort, we can reduce, if not bring to an end, the scourge in our midst.

    “I received the vision about this programme after I had a personal experience. The response of our people to the foundation has been very encouraging. In February, we began the massive sensitisation of our people about the danger of these two diseases.

    “I am optimistic that if we educate our people they will comply. Ever since the sensitisation programme started, the response has been overwhelming. That time, we went to about nine local government areas across the state. After our sensitisation campaign at Baruten Local Government Area, the following day, women from that area came for either breast or cervical cancer examination.”

    Mrs. Ahmed said her advocacy drive was borne out of the alarming rate at which breast and cervical cancers affect women, a situation she attributed to lack of adequate awareness and lack of periodic screening.

    The NGO has opened 13 more centres. They are General Hospital Lafiagi, Cottage Hospital Tsaragi, General Hospital Share, Comprehensive Health Centre Shao, Cottage Hospital, Ajikobi, Maternity Dispensary, Oke ogun, Comprehensive Health Centre Ekan meje, Cottage Hospital, Iloffa, Primary Health Centre, Babanla, Basic Health Centre, Oke Oyi, Comprehensive Health Centre, Okelele, Okesuna Ward Clinic, Okesuna and General Hospital Okuta.

    The impressive turn out of women in all the communities where the screening centres had been inaugurated encouraged Mrs. Ahmed to include 10 additional centres to the initial 15. This brings to 25 the number of cancer screening centres which are spread across the state.

    In each of the communities visited for the inauguration of the centres, the mobile clinic team of the foundation was on hand to give free drugs, perform eye tests, check blood pressure and on-the-spot treatments of minor diseases while complex cases were referred to general hospitals for proper handling.

  • Cancer scare cost me my place in Glasgow -Becky James

    Cancer scare cost me my place in Glasgow -Becky James

    Cyclist Becky James listened, numb, as a nurse drew a line with ‘moderate’ at one end, ‘cancer’ at the other and explained her test results were ‘severe’ on that scale.

    Suddenly James did not feel like a two-time world champion worried about the knee injury that would eventually rule her out of the Commonwealth Games, but a 22-year-old woman from Abergavenny who was shocked and scared to be confronted with the word ‘cancer’.

    A smear test in May, a routine procedure every three years for women aged 25 to 49 which aims to detect cells that might develop into cervical cancer, had revealed abnormal results, but James had been confident there was little to worry about.

    It was only when she visited hospital a month later and was told her results were ‘severe’ that panic set in. She had two surgical procedures and,  four ‘stressful’ weeks later, she received her results — ‘CIN3, the highest grade of all of them’ — and had a minor operation to cut away the abnormal cells.

    ‘The doctor said to me if I had waited another year it could have been completely different,’ says James. ‘It makes you think about things in a very different way.

    ‘I realised how important your health is over everything else. I spoke to one of my friends before I was racing in Germany and I said, “My form’s not very good”.

    ‘She said: “Good health, or good form, Becky?” It’s true. It does make you think.

    ‘When the nurse drew that scale I came out of hospital in complete shock and I found the time waiting for my results really, really stressful.

    ‘You read about stuff on the internet — you know you shouldn’t look it up, but of course you do — and you lose sleep over it. It has been a really hard few months.’

    James has been understandably hesitant to talk about a deeply sensitive subject. She still worries she ‘made a big deal out of nothing’. You can hear the doubts in her lilting Welsh accent as she speaks; her shock and fear competing against an athlete’s need for rational explanation.

    James did not have cervical cancer but, if left alone, those abnormal cells could have developed into something much more serious. And that is why she has decided to speak out: to encourage other women to go for smear tests and catch the disease early.

    ‘I wasn’t sure whether to say anything about it,’ she says, ‘but I do want to encourage other women to go for smear tests. I think it’s really important.

    ‘It was a big part of me missing out on the Commonwealth Games, so that’s why I decided to speak about it. If I hadn’t had that time out, who knows.’

    The period James spent worrying about, and dealing with, her personal health also had a direct impact on the knee injury that means the 2010 Commonwealth silver and bronze medallist will miss the Games in Glasgow.

    Her knee ‘flared up three times’ during those two months and caused intense pain as she tried to catch up on missed training after getting her smear test results.

    The proud Welshwoman is desperately disappointed not to be competing this week, but felt she had to make such a difficult decision for the sake of her long-term career. The past few months have consequently been ‘incredibly tough’ as she has been banned from riding the bike she loves and become increasingly ‘grumpy’ with her family and boyfriend George North, the Wales and Lions winger.

    ‘It was a really hard decision,’ said James. ‘In my personal opinion the Commonwealth Games are a major thing. For me in Delhi in 2010 it was like an Olympics. I was 18 and it was my breakthrough season. Plus it’s only once every four years you get to wear the Wales kit.

    ‘I thought I could be fitter and faster and stronger this time and Glasgow was my biggest target for the season, but it just hasn’t worked out.

    ‘I have been thinking long term, and thinking about the Olympic Games in Rio in 2016; this drives me even more.

    ‘I missed out on the London Olympics and now it’s even worse with Glasgow. But it’s driving me even more.’

  • Cancer centre to train oncologists, others

    A privately-owned cancer facility in Ghana, Sweden-Ghana Medical Centre (SGMC) has said oncologists and other health care workers in Nigeria and other West African countries can be trained in its facility for improved performance.

    According to the centre, interested candidates only need to apply through their institutions.

    Its Medical Director Jens Engelson, said building capacity of professionals will increase access to the management and treatment of cancer.

    Engelson identified people’s lifestyle as a major predisposing factor to cancer diseases.

    He said increased awareness has helped to ensure more people get diagnosed of the disease, adding: “Most cases are already there but we do not have a proper system in place to capture them”.

    The level of awareness and diagnosis, he said, has improved a lot in the last few years.

    The centre’s Chief Executive Officer Joshua Tetteh, said it takes a lot to run a cancer centre.

    He said there must be uninterrupted power supply daily as well as an enabling environment. Besides, there is the need for atomic energy permission and other support structures because cancer treatment requires a lot of logistics”.

    Tetteh said cancer patients in Nigeria and other countries in the region have been accessing treatment in the facility at a reduced cost.

    Patients, he said need not journey to India and the United States for cancer treatment.

    Many patients at the centre, the CEO said, are having palliative care because they presented their cases too late.

  • Childhood cancer is real, Foundation says

    Pupils from eight schools in Lagos State sang at a childhood cancer awareness programme organised by the Children Living With Cancer Foundation (CLWCF) last Saturday.

    CLWCF’s Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Mrs Nneka Nwaobi,  said the event, which held at the Avicenna Schools, Ikeja, was organised to teach the pupils about cancer in order for them to spread the news to others.

    Mrs Nwaobi said teaching young ones about the disease is more effective than talking to the adults, who she noted tend to spiritualise things. She said the rate of the illness is becoming alarming and some parents are not bold enough to talk about it.

    “We are creating awareness to get children to understand that children do have cancer. We are using the children because most adults in Nigeria are just ignorant to learn about childhood cancer or any bad thing at all. So, because of that we decided to go through the children believing that when they are informed they would communicate it with their parents.

    “I know a parent who has not told his relatives that his child has cancer and most parents that we deal with think that it is spiritual; something that they need church or native doctor’s assistance to tell them who is behind it,” she said.

    By enlightening the pupils, Mrs Nwaobi said she hopes they would learn to be charitable rather than stigmatise children with the illness.

    She said the prevalent type of cancers in children include leukemia;  cancer of the kidney; neuroblastoma; cancer of the bone, while cancer of the ovary is rare.

    She said early diagnosis makes managing the disease easier.

    “Unfortunately, it is not like adult cancer where you would say that there are pre-diposing factors such as drinking or smoking and some other things. In children, the youngest I have seen is six weeks old, so how do you tell the parents to prevent that. The most important thing is the screening and coming in early and then knowing that there is a cure at the end. Most of the ones we have cured came in early while those we have lost came in late and a few of them had mixed diagnosis,” she said.

  • 2face’s dad diagnosed with cancer

    2face’s dad diagnosed with cancer

    Nigeria’s music icon, Innocent 2face Idibia has announced that his father has reportedly been diagnosed with prostate cancer. The artiste allegedly divulged the news at the Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy (CECP) cancer charity event which held on June 8 at Eko Hotels and Suites.
    Information has it that the cancer is said to be in its early stages and the singer’s 67-year-old father is reportedly due to begin chemotherapy soon.
    At the event tagged Banquet of Stars against Cancer (BOSAC) 2Face was joined by other A-list Artistes and one of Africa’s greatest music Maestro, Sir Emeka Nwokedi, the conductor of the Lagos City Chorale in a performance by the Choir and Orchestra of the Musical Society of Nigeria (MUSON).
    The benefit event served as an opportunity to raise funds in support of the war against cancer in Nigeria.

  • Curbing the cancer menace

    Curbing the cancer menace

    Cancer is no respecter of persons. It attacks the priviledged and the less priviledged. On saturday, former Information and Communications Minister Dr Dora Akunyili succumbed to cancer after a two-year battle. She became the latest among people of status to fall victim of the ailment. How can this disease be tackled? OYEYEMI GBENGA-MUSTAPHA reports that its prevention, early detection and treatment are important to check the disease.

    Prof. (Mrs.) Dora Nkem Akunyili, a former Director General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and former Minister of Information, has joined the list of Nigerians who died of cancer. She was aged 59. She died in a Specialist Cancer Hospital in Indian on Saturday, June 7, at 10 am, Nigerian time, after a two-year battle with cancer.

    Her death last Saturday underscored one fact:, the disease knows nobody or class. It can kill the high, the mighty, the rich and the poor. The type of cancer she died of is yet to be disclosed.

    The list of prominent Nigerians whose lives have been cut short by this dreaded disease is increasing by the day. Wife of former military Head of State, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida (retd), Maryam Babangida, died of ovarian cancer at the age of 61 In Los Angeles. The late Funmilayo Olayinka, former Deputy Governor of Ekiti State, also died of breast cancer just as the late Cassandra Gabriel, popularly known as Sisi Caro in the rested Nigerian Television Authoritry (NTA) soap, the Village Headmaster, died of breast cancer.

    Likewise, the 48-year-old wife of the eldest son of former governor of Edo State; Dr. Samuel Ogbemudia, Roseline , died of cancer. The same fate befell the philantropist and sister of former Ekiti State governor Ayodele Fayose, Evangelist Bimpe Oluwayose-Sorinolu.

    The duo of Roseline and Bimpe just like Akunyili, battled breast cancer till death. While the former died in a hospital in India, the latter, who had been treating the ailment since 2011, died in a London hospital.

    Another victim, the late Mrs Elizabeth Kafaru, a frontliner herbal medicine practitioner died of cancer just as Clara, wife of Edo State governor, Adams Oshiomhole died of cancer on  December 8, 2010, eleven days to her daughter’s wedding.

    Second Republic Senate Leader, the late Dr. Olusola Saraki, battled the ailment for five years. Also, the late 51-year-old fashion designer, Remi Osholake, a popularly known as Remi Lagos, and the late Sam Ojebode, ex-Green Eagles football star, died after futile battle with cancer.

    A Nollywood personality, Taiwo Bello, also succumbed to cancer last year. She was a movie producer and director. She  co-wrote the movie, Jenifa, with Funke Akindele, produced and directed the 2010 movie, Omije Mi.

    In December, 2010, Yusuf Jibo, former Zonal Director of the NTA, died of colon cancer. So also were the ace journalist, Sele Eradiri and the civil rights activists, Dr Beko Ransome-Kuti.

    On September 5, 2009, Human Rights lawyer and activist, Chief Gani Fawehinmi, lost the battle to cancer. Remi Abiola, actress and wife of the late business mogul and politician, Chief M.K.O. Abiola, as well as Alaere Alaibe, wife of the former helsman of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Timi Alaibe, died of cancer.

    NTA ace broadcaster, Yinka Craig, 60, died on  September 23, 2008 as a result of cancer of the blood (leukemia), so was the Information Specialist, World Health Organisation, Oghide Austin, while musician-turned evangelist, Sonny Okosun, lost the battle to cancer of the colon on May 24, 2008 at the age of 61.

    The list is inexhaustible. Mrs Comfort Ponnle, of MicCom Cables and Alexander Ibru, Chairman and Publisher of The Guardian Newspaper, died of cancer. Chief Sub-Editor, Vanguard Newspaper, Dayo Aminu, died of cancer as well.

    The former Chairman of the Advertising Practitioners of Nigeria (APCON), Dr May Nzeribe, died of Prostate Cancer.

    Former President of Performing Musician Association of Nigeria (PMAN), Mustapha Amego, fondly called Musky, died of colon cancer; Mrs Kofoworola Orija of the Bloom Cancer Foundation also died of breast cancer.

    In Nigeria, cancer incidences are common. No week passes without a Nigerian dying of the dreaded disease. Hundreds of thousands are dying silently. There are a few survivors though. This shows that it can be treated. Head of Department, College of Medicine, University of Lagos (CMUL), Idi Araba, Prof Olukemi Odukoya, is a survivor.

    It is a class of disease characterised by out-of-control cell growth. There are over 100 different types, and each can be classified by the type of cell it initially affected.

    Cancer ultimately, is the result of cells that uncontrollably grow and do not die. Normal cells in the body follow an orderly path of growth, division, and death. Programmed cell death is called apoptosis, and when this process breaks down, cancer begins to form. Unlike regular cells, cancer cells do not experience programmatic death, instead they continue to grow and divide. This leads to a mass of abnormal cells that grow out of control.

    If the balance of cell division and death is disturbed, a tumor may form.

     

    How cancer spreads

    Scientists reported in a publication, Nature Communications (October 2012 issue), that they have discovered an important clue why cancer cells spread. According to them, it has something to do with their adhesion (stickiness) properties. Certain molecular interactions between cells and the scaffolding that holds them in place (extracellular matrix) cause them to become unstuck at the original tumor site; they become dislodged, move on and then re-attach themselves at a new site.

    The researchers said this discovery is important because cancer mortality is mainly due to metastatic tumors; those that grow from cells that have traveled from their original site to another part of the body. Only 10 per cent of cancer deaths are caused by the primary tumors.

     

    Signs or symptoms of cancer

    Signs and symptoms are both signals of injury, illness, disease, or that something is not right in the body. A sign is a signal that can be seen by someone else-maybe a loved one, or a doctor, nurse, or other health care professional. For example, fever, fast breathing, and abnormal lung sounds heard through a stethoscope may be signs of pneumonia. A symptom is a signal that is felt or noticed by the person who has it, but may not be easily seen by anyone else. For example, weakness, aching, and feeling short of breath may be symptoms of pneumonia.

    Symptoms depend on the type and location of the tumor. For example, lung tumors may cause coughing, shortness of breath, or chest pain. Tumors of the colon can cause weight loss, diarrhea, constipation, iron deficiency anemia, and blood in the stool.

    Some tumors may not have any symptoms. In certain tumors, such as pancreatic cancer, symptoms often do not start until the disease has reached an advanced stage.

    A few patients show no signs or symptoms until the cancer has far advanced. However, there are some signs and symptoms, although not specific, which usually occur in most cancer patients that are fairly easy for the person to detect.

    There are over 200 types of cancer. Anything that may cause a normal body cell to develop abnormally potentially can cause cancer.

    Why Nigerians are dying of cancer?

    According to a professor of Radiation, Prof Moses Aweda, radiations have been proven to impair human cells thereby causing cancer.

    “I have proven with mice that when the human system is exposed to a certain degree of radiation, cancers can occour. Food cooked with Microwave should not be eaten at all, because it has been denatured and same can lead to cancer as well,” he said.

    According to a Public Health Physician, Community Health Department, Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi Araba, Dr. Nasir Ariyibi , another cause of cancer is late presentation to the hospital, “a lot of people go late to the hospital despite improvement in diagnosis.

    “Cancer is an abnormal increase in the number of cells in the body. It could affect a particular organ of the body, where the organ begins to increase in size, due to unregulated cell division. Normally, every cell undergoes growth. For example the skin sheds off old cells as news ones grows. This mechanism is being regulated. But when it becomes uncontrollable, that means the regulatory mechanism is off,” Dr. Ariyibi said.

     

    Causes

    He continued: “There are two types of abnormal growth, benign and malignant. Either can exert pressure on immediate or extended organs. But the most dangerous is malignant growth. That is cancer. It disrupts the organs around that area and grows uninhibited. It can leave where it started off, attack other organs of the body and causes further damages. It is the organ it affects that it is named after. The commonest among women in Nigeria are breast and cervical cancer; leukemia in children while prostate is common among men.”

    Dr Ariyibi said experts are of the view that cancer is on the increase in Nigeria because, “there is improvement in diagnosis. “The statistics we are working with now, from the World Health Organisation (WHO) said 250, 000 new cases are seen annually, with 10, 000 deaths per year. Unlike other non communicable diseases (NCDs) that you can say these are the causes, you cannot say that about cancer. We only have predisposing factors,” he said.

    Ariyibi continued: “In some types of cancer, way of life is a predisposing factor. For instancer, cancer of the lung resulting from smoking unlike breast cancer that you cannot put your hands on, except perhaps the genes resulting from hereditary; or women who have not sucked in their life or women do not suck adequately.

    “When you look at some of these factors, we say they are non modifiable. Non modifiable are factors that cannot be influenced, such as breast cancer in women and prostate cancer in men. Not that some men don’t have breast cancer, but the female genders due to presence of hormones such as Estrogens are at higher risk. Age is also a non modifiable factor. Genetics/hereditary, i.e. a person’s make up; race like being a Caucasian for instance are non modifiable factors.

    “The modifiable risk factors are the ones we can change or influence or play a role in. Lifestyle is a major risk factor. Smoking, drinking alcohols or abusing drugs; do you eat junk, i.e. empty calorie food; do you over eat or eat less. Are you predisposed to germs, for instance Hepatitis B that can be contracted from sexual partners, and which manipulate lung cancer growth? Exposed to multiple sexual partners or engaging in early sexual activities that can aid contracting papilloma virus which causes cervical cancer. Every two minutes, a woman develops cervical cancer.

    “Diet is a huge predisposing factor. How healthy are we eating today? Noodles and pasta, fizzy drinks Do we take fruits that contain anti oxidants that mop up free radicals? Free radicals, also known simply as radicals, are organic molecules responsible for aging, tissue damage, and possibly some diseases. These molecules are very unstable, therefore, they look to bond with other molecules, destroying their health and further continuing the damaging process. Antioxidants present in many foods, are molecules that prevent free radicals from harming healthy tissue. Exercise is also good for the body. But how many do that these days.

    Prevention

     

    According to Ariyibi, prevention through the modifiable factors is important in preventing cancer. “As physicians, we do now create awareness on best way out. We now educate on lifestyle changes. Making the right life choices in diet, living, and existence. In short, healthy lifestyle. “We want to get to the level where people will be empowered with the right information. And also be involved in their health management. Avoiding injurious substances like Energy drinks. The basic ingredients are sugar and caffeine. Sugar can trigger diabetes while caffeine triggers the body to work excessively,” he said.

    He added: “It is good and in order to ensure that  good policies are put in place by the government. Nothing stops the government from having a policy on all local government areas to have cervical cancer screening and treatment centres.

    “You see, most non communicable diseases do not give signs. They are just there developing. Because they are asymptomatic, screening and testing for them are the best way to pick them up easily.

    “For instance, breast cancer can be detected through mammogram, cervical cancer through pap smear. For changes would have been taken place at a cellular level. And if detected at that level, it can be treated. At least, one can do Self Breast Examination (SBE) in picking up breast cancer. Any lump that is detected can be further examined.

    He said people should educated on the advantages of going to the hospital early when they feel any illness or abnormality in their body. “They should not be going to spiritual homes or traditional healers. First come to the hospital, get the condition diagnosed and treated. People need to know that it is not arrow from the enemy,” he said.

    He added: “We have the facility and expertise to detect, treat, manage and rehabilitate cancer cases in Nigeria. There is no need to travel overseas to treat cancer. We have measures like mammogram for breast cancer; papsmear at our Community Out clinic at LUTH.”

    “Assuming cervical cancer is detected, we have Obys and Gyn department. Radiotherapy at its advanced stage is available in the hospital. Do not put a cost to your health. Just have an aim- to get well. People may want to stay away because they consider some of these treatments expensive, but no money can replace a lost live. With a N3, 500, papsmear can be done,” he said.

    He, however, noted that people spend more on Aso Ebi and drinks at Beer parlous and other frivolities. “Mammography is below N50, 000. People should know that the treatments are available and are so cheap. They should not wait till things get worse. Because even at the best of centres, advanced cancer is not treatable.

    “Screening is essential. People who are passive smokers should avoid cigarette smoke. Both active and passive smokers are liable to developing cancer; even passive smokers are at greater risk. Government policy of not smoking in public places is commendable, but implementation is important. People should adhere to the law,” Ariyibi said.