The Post

Lockdown delays will cost lives: society

- Katarina Williams katarina.williams@stuff.co.nz

The Cancer Society fears the nationwide Covid-19 lockdown has delayed some cancer diagnoses and treatment, and is calling on district health boards to act immediatel­y.

Fearing further delays ‘‘will cost lives’’, the society wants cancer care to be prioritise­d, citing overseas evidence that lockdowns led to half as many cancer diagnoses being made.

Medical director Dr Chris Jackson said a three-month diagnosis delay could result in 400 additional cancer deaths.

Director-general of health Dr Ashley Bloomfield admitted yesterday ‘‘there was no doubt some people’s care has been delayed’’.

Jackson said that restrictio­ns imposed by the weeks’ long lockdown meant fewer GP visits, fewer scans and fewer diagnostic tests being carried out.

With the country now sitting at alert level three, Jackson believed swift action from DHBs was required. ‘‘Fewer people are seeing their GPs so that means symptoms are going ignored. These delays will cost lives.’’

Among those impacted was Aucklander Elisa Wijohn, who had a CT scan – needed to see how far her advanced breast cancer had spread – abruptly cancelled this month due to the lockdown.

The Cancer Control Agency has issued advice about scans, surgeries, chemothera­py and radiation treatments that can be safely delivered during levels three and four.

However, the society said it was aware some DHBs had sent patients back to their GPs as they were unable to carry out certain operations and procedures.

‘‘As the health system ramps up after level four lockdown, we must prioritise cancer diagnosis and treatment in order to avoid preventabl­e deaths. DHBs must make sure this happens.

‘‘We support the lockdown, which has kept people with cancer safe from Covid-19, but cancer diagnosis and surgery must now proceed with urgency in order to prevent non-Covid-19 cancer casualties,’’ Jackson added.

Bloomfield conceded cancer patients had experience­d delays in both diagnostic procedures and treatment during the lockdown.

‘‘There’s been some excellent work done between Diana Sarfati, the acting chief executive of the Cancer Control Agency, and clinicians across the sector about how to reduce the likelihood of any harm resulting from that.

‘‘And in particular, how to make sure, as we go into alert level three, that we can prioritise the investigat­ions and treatment of people with cancer to make sure that they are getting what they need,’’ Bloomfield said.

DHBs had received ‘‘clear guidance’’ from the Ministry of Health over the services they should be providing at level three, he added.

‘‘The key principle for DHBs and their hospitals over coming days will be starting to move back to providing more elective and planned services, both outpatient appointmen­ts and also potentiall­y surgery and other procedures.

‘‘And then easing into that within the context of wanting to keep everyone safe, so making sure their infection prevention control procedures are all A1, while still maintainin­g that ability, if necessary, to scale up a response to Covid-19.’’

‘‘Fewer people are seeing their GPs so that means symptoms are going ignored.’’ Dr Chris Jackson

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