EARLY diagnosis of cervical and breast cancer among women will soon get new impetus as the government yesterday announced to set up 90 centres for test and treatment of the diseases in 30 councils by June, this year.
Minister for Health, Community
Development, Gender, Elders and Children, Ms Ummy Mwalimu, told a press
conference that the World Bank (WB) will finance the construction
project and it has already released 2bn/- for the work.
The stations are expected to address a
challenge whereby most of the patients are diagnosed while the diseases
are already at a high stage, a situation that defies treatment. “We are
going to train 180 health experts for these centres. This means we will
deploy two of them at each centre,” she said.
She noted that the statistics indicate
that the 70 per cent of the patients go to the Ocean Road Cancer
Institute (ORCI) at the time when the disease has already spread,
reaching at third or fourth stage.
“This leads many of them to death after
failing to treat them. And the country has been losing human resources
because many of these patients are in most cases aged between 30 and 63
years,” she said. It is estimated that the country records 50,000 cases
of cancer every year.
However, only 11.4 per cent get
treatment. She was speaking here in Dodoma ahead of the World Cancer Day
which is marked nationally today in Dar es Salaam.
This year, the Day is marked with the
theme: “We can. I can,” to explore how everyone – together and
individually – can do their part to reduce the global burden of cancer.”
She said the ORCI will get two new X-Ray machines for cancer treatment
after it has received 5bn/- from President John Magufuli, thus making a
total of 9.5bn/- for that purpose.
Dr Magufuli’s move will give relief as
the shortage of the machines has afflicted the nation for a long time.
The only machine available is outdated and invariably gets technical
faults. “I would like to inform the public that now the procedures to
procure the machines are about to be completed,” she said.
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