Mmegi

First mobile mammograph­y unit launched

- TSAONE BASIMANEBO­TLHE Staff Writer

Local private clinic, Medlane Health Care, has launched the country’s first ever mobile mammograph­y unit, in a move aimed at raising cancer awareness and fighting the disease. The unit will be moving across the country taking mammograph­y breast screening for free.

During the journey, a team of volunteers which includes doctors and nurses, will visit the identified clinics to give awareness talks, demonstrat­e the selfbreast examinatio­n techniques and conduct screening including palpation and breast scans using portable ultrasound and mammogramm­e machines.

Launching the facility, Medlane Health Care Superinten­dent Dr Noorain Lottering said they have taken a stance to share the responsibi­lity to increase awareness about the importance of early breast cancer detection and diagnosis.

“Our vision is to make a difference to the lives of Batswana not only through medicine but through health education, empowering individual­s across the nation about diseases and illness so that they may identify illnesses early on to seek medical care and reduce mortality and morbidity statistics,” said Lottering.

She added: “It is with working with the public and private health care networks and NGOs that this goal can be achieved. Breast cancer remains the number one cancer killer. According to WHO, in 2020, 17.5 per 100,000 women presented in the late stages when treatment efforts can prove futile. This may be in part due to a lack of education on breast cancer and also due to the dispersion of the population not having access to mammograph­y units located in Gaborone. Our unit is a siemens Hologic mammograph­y unit that is quite renowned in mammograph­y for its reliabilit­y and quality of imagery.”

She said the unit uses tomosynthe­sis data to generate both 2D and 3D images of the breast, giving rise to more accurate imagery for the detection of suspicious lesions whilst also reducing the incidence of false positives.

Dr Lottering also said their mammograph­y unit is fitted onto its own individual truck body for safety and ease of travel.

Speaking on behalf of one of the partners in the initiative, First Capital Bank, the bank’s chief of staff and head of marketing and communicat­ions Dr Hajra Mahomed-Tajbhai said breast cancer is diverse and complex. She revealed the disease profoundly impacts everyone it touches whether patients, loved ones, doctors, caregivers, advocates and others.

She said over 70% of patients seek medical attention when they are in the late stages of the disease, which commonly results in the loss of lives.

“First Capital Bank has sponsored 100 mammogramm­es, valued at P900,000, to be facilitate­d by Medlane healthcare. The bank is also contributi­ng the sum of P110,000 towards outreach initiative­s with the Medlane mobile mammograph­y unit,” she continued.

 ?? ?? The country’s first ever mobile mammograph­y unit
The country’s first ever mobile mammograph­y unit

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