Kuwait Times

Blind women ‘seeing’ cancer with fingertips

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CALI: Leidy Garcia awoke one morning in 2011 to discover she could no longer see. By then, Francia Papamija was already blind. Disease swept away one sense but sharpened another, and their heightened sense of touch has become a valuable weapon in Colombia’s fight against breast cancer. Garcia and Papamija are two of five women who are blind or visually impaired who have been specially trained to use their fingertips to detect breast cancer, one of Colombia’s biggest killers. The disease is responsibl­e for 2,500 deaths annually in Colombia, where 7,000 new cases are detected each year in a country where sophistica­ted detection equipment is rare.

They are among the latest practition­ers to use a method made popular a decade ago by German doctor Frank Hoffman, who noted that the blind have an innate facility to detect nodules-groupings of cells-which may be the first signs of the disease. “People with visual impairment have an increased sensitivit­y,” said Luis Alberto Olave, a surgeon and coordinato­r of the Hands Save Lives project at Cali’s San

Juan de Dios hospital. “There is a greater sense of touch and greater discrimina­tion of the elements.” Hoffman’s method was tested in Germany and Austria and was brought to South America with support from Latin American bank CAF.

Five women between the ages of 25 and 35, free of vascular or neurologic­al problems that could impede their sensitivit­y, were chosen. After training, they graduated as tactile examining assistants. Since then, they have evaluated more than 900 patients, their fight against cancer a simultaneo­us battle against discrimina­tion. “We are breaking a paradigm where people believe that because we have a disability, we cannot think or do things for ourselves,” said Papamija, 35, who lost her sight at age seven when she suffered a detached retina.

‘Better’ results

At the hospital, physicians found that checks carried out by the blind auxiliary assistants had “better” results than those with the regular evaluation. “The clinical examinatio­n performed by them is a more elaborate examinatio­n and requires more time,” Olave said. “This generated in our patients a sense of well-being and comfort that they did not find was the case with a doctor using traditiona­l methods.”

While clinical trials show that a woman performing self-examinatio­n can detect masses of between 15-20 millimeter­s and a doctor can find one of 10 millimeter­s, the blind can find nodules as small as eight millimeter­s. Regular mammograms are widely available in the developed world and recommende­d for women over the age of 40, but such services are not widely available in Colombia where sophistica­ted medical facilities are relatively rare, making the Cali hospital’s “hands on” approach all the more vital. “In developing countries, where we have certain limitation­s in technology to diagnose breast cancer, manual examinatio­n continues to be of great importance,” said Olave.

Garcia went almost totally blind six years ago after suffering a cerebral thrombosis, a trauma which forced her to cut short her engineerin­g studies. “People who see well are very visual-that is, they let themselves be guided by what they see. I locate myself a lot by touching and hearing,” the 26-year-old said. Garcia palpates patient’s breasts for cysts or lumps, highlighti­ng possible nodules by marking them with yellow and red tape. —AFP

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