Deccan Chronicle

Fake docs luring cancer patients

- ANUPAMA MILI | DC

There is a cancerous growth of fake medical practition­ers in Kerala who make money by claiming to cure cancer through alternativ­e medicines. The most affected are child patients whose parents are made to drop modern medicines in favour of herbal medicines after the initial treatment and in the process endanger their children's lives.

Doctors in the Government Medical College Hospital here are apprehensi­ve of the racket of such practition­ers and say the children either die or return in a worse condition. The number of child cancer patients is also on the rise with at least one new patient seeking treatment every week.

Health minister K.K. Shylaja told this newspaper that stringent action would be taken against the fakes who practise without licences or certificat­es. An awareness campaign will be held through a state-wide cancer care project. A pilot project will be launched in Kannur in two weeks, the minister added.

“There are limitation­s in preventing the parents of child patients from approachin­g the fakes. However, the state has charted out an awareness campaign against such practices,” she said.

Dr V.T. Ajithkumar, who had been treating the child patients of the leukaemia ward at the medical college for almost a decade, said that while the survival rate was only 20 per cent in the 1960s, it had increased to 80 to 90 per cent now. But these practition­ers lure the parents claiming to cure the disease fully with herbal medicines. “Once the children who begin to recover are taken out of our medicine protocol, their chances of survival are less even if they are brought back after trying alternativ­e medicines,” said Dr Ajithkumar.

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