The National - News

Elissa shows breast cancer is not a death sentence

▶ There might be a stigma around screening but women must take steps to care for health

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With more than three million views within a day of being posted on YouTube, a seven-minute music video could yet prove to be the most successful public health campaign yet seen in the Middle East. In the clip for the song Ila

Kol Elli Bihebbouni (To Those Who Love Me), released on Tuesday, the Lebanese singer Elissa revealed she was diagnosed with breast cancer late last year. Detected early, her tumour was treated successful­ly with radiothera­py. But the video’s message – “early detection of breast cancer can save your life” – is now spreading across social media, thanks to Elissa’s 33 million followers on Facebook and Twitter.

Around the world, breast cancer is the most common type of cancer affecting women. In the UAE, it is responsibl­e for one in five of all deaths among women. Yet the subject remains widely taboo and as a result, many fail to take advantage of screening programmes that can detect tumours sufficient­ly early to stop lives being needlessly cut short. The advice from Abu Dhabi’s Department of Health is clear. Every woman over the age of 40 – or even younger if there is a family history of the disease – should have a mammogram carried out every two years. Women should also carry out regular self-examinatio­ns to look for unusual lumps or other signs of change. Statistics from World Cancer Research Fund Internatio­nal spell out the risks of failing to check regularly for breast cancer. The survival rate after treatment for early stage breast cancer is between 80 and 90 per cent but if therapy is delayed until the cancer has reached a more advanced stage, the chance of surviving falls to 24 per cent.

Research has shown that Muslim women in particular might be reluctant to undergo screening, for reasons ranging from concerns about maintainin­g modesty to the fatalistic belief at death, if it comes earlier than expected, is inevitable. The UAE has taken steps to preserve cultural traditions and only female radiograph­ers carry out mammograms. As the experience of one of the biggest-selling artists in the Middle East demonstrat­es, when it comes to breast cancer, women can and must take control of their own destinies.

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