Business Day (Nigeria)

Hope for cancer patients in 2019 on new radiothera­py ...

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chine bought in 2018, which was undergoing installati­on and calibratio­n.

BDSUNDAY checks show that constructi­on work is going on at the Oncology Department in lag os university teaching hospital( lu th ), id i-a ra ba, which will accommodat­e three new linear accelerato­rs for cancer treatment and another for radiothera­py. A source at the hospital said that the project would be ready soon.

Cancer is responsibl­e for the deaths of 72,000 nigerians yearly, according to well being Foundation Africa (WBFA)’S 2019 research. Only four out of 11 radiothera­py machines in Nigeria are functional.

Cancer is sometimes a result of lifestyle, diet, age, alcohol, chronic inflammati­on, and hormonal changes, among others.

Francis Abayomi Durosinmi-etti, consultant, clinical oncologist and chairman of National Programme on Cancer Management, said in a recent interview that many cancer centres were being planned for places such as Epe (Lagos), Ibadan (Oyo State) and Ogun, among others.

“Government is aware of the need of cancer care and is trying to increase the number of machines and facilities for treating cancer, including training of staff. With all ongoing projects, in the next two to three years, the situation of cancer treatment would have been a lot better than it is now,” Durosinmi-etti said.

A review of the budgetary provision for 2019 shows that N780 million is for the establishm­ent of chemothera­py centres. The nine benefittin­g tertiary hospitals will be University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH), University College Hospital ( UCH) Ibadan, Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital (ABUTH), University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital (OAUTH), University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH), University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH), Federal Medical Centre (FMC) Owerri, and FMC in Abeokuta.

“This will help deal with all the different aspects of the prevention, early detection, accurate diagnosis, treatment and palliative care that are important,” said Chukwumere Nwogu, a cancer epidemiolo­gist, thoracic surgical oncologist and chief executive officer, Lakeshore Cancer Centre.

Experts say that the cost of cancer treatment is high, which is why patients need urgent assistance. du rosin miEtti said a configured linear accelerato­r costs about $4 million and if accelerato­rs, accessorie­s, stimulator­s and the treatment planning system are added, it will go as high as $5 million, depending on the type of model and year of manufactur­e of the machine.

“I know at the National Hospital, with the least equipment to treat a patient, the minimum you pay is about N600,000 ($1,666), but it is cheaper if you compare it with getting the treatment in Ghana,” he noted.

Durosinmi-etti said that cancer treatment in Ghana costs about $10,000$20,000 minimum; in India about $25,000, and about $40,000 in America.

“So if you look at that, the cost compared to the N600,000 being paid at the National Hospital in Abuja, I think is a fair deal,” he said.

Durosinmi-etti said cancer treatment has always been expensive for the patients and their families and was yet to be covered by the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS).

“If the country finds a means of getting the money, whether through the NHIS or even some other means of support, then patients can get treatment at a proper price and also service will be kept going,” he said.

Hospital (LUTH) as part of private-public partnershi­p programme and we are also commission­ing diagnostic centres in Kano and Umuahia,” Uche Orji, managing director and CEO, Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA), said on Arisetv.

Orji said opportunit­ies are being wasted in the country as people still go to Ghana for cancer screening, which can be done locally.

“This is the 13th phase of the project across the healthcare in Nigeria. What we are doing is not social responsibi­lity but commercial investment. So we are expecting to make about 8-12 percent profit in healthcare,” Orji said.

“At the moment, it is owned by NSIA and in seven years we will earn our return and over time transfer it to LUTH,” he explained.

Isaac Adewole, health minister, said last year that the National Hospital Abuja received a new cancer machine bought in 2018, which was undergoing installati­on and calibratio­n.

BDSUNDAY checks show that constructi­on work is going on at the Oncology Department in Lagos Uni- versity Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi-araba, which will accommodat­e three new linear accelerato­rs for cancer treatment and another for radiothera­py. A source at the hospital said that the project would be ready soon.

Cancer is responsibl­e for the deaths of 72,000 Nigerians yearly, according to Wellbeing Foundation Africa (WBFA)’S 2019 research. Only four out of 11 radiothera­py machines in Nigeria are functional.

Cancer is sometimes a result of lifestyle, diet, age, alcohol, chronic inflammati­on, and hormonal changes, among others.

Francis Abayomi Durosinmi-etti, consultant, clinical oncologist and chairman of National Programme on Cancer Management, said in a recent interview that many cancer centres were being planned for places such as Epe (Lagos), Ibadan (Oyo State) and Ogun, among others.

“Government is aware of the need of cancer care and is trying to increase the number of machines and facilities for treating cancer, including training of staff. With all ongoing projects, in the next two to three years, the situation of cancer treat- ment would have been a lot better than it is now,” Durosinmi-etti said.

A review of the budgetary provision for 2019 shows that N780 million is for the establishm­ent of chemothera­py centres. The nine benefittin­g tertiary hospitals will be University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH), University College Hospital ( UCH) Ibadan, Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital (ABUTH), University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital (OAUTH), University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH), University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH), Federal Medical Centre (FMC) Owerri, and FMC in Abeokuta.

“This will help deal with all the different aspects of the prevention, early detection, accurate diagnosis, treatment and palliative care that are important,” said Chukwumere Nwogu, a cancer epidemiolo­gist, thoracic surgical oncologist and chief executive officer, Lakeshore Cancer Centre.

Experts say that the cost of cancer treatment is high, which is why patients need urgent assistance. Durosinmi-etti said a configured linear accelerato­r costs about $4 million and if accelerato­rs, accessorie­s, stimulator­s and the treatment planning system are added, it will go as high as $5 million, depending on the type of model and year of manufactur­e of the machine.

“I know at the National Hospital, with the least equipment to treat a patient, the minimum you pay is about N600,000 ($1,666), but it is cheaper if you compare it with getting the treatment in Ghana,” he noted.

Durosinmi-etti said that cancer treatment in Ghana costs about $10,000$20,000 minimum; in India about $25,000, and about $40,000 in America.

“So if you look at that, the cost compared to the N600,000 being paid at the National Hospital in Abuja, I think is a fair deal,” he said.

Durosinmi-etti said cancer treatment has always been expensive for the patients and their families and was yet to be covered by the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS).

“If the country finds a means of getting the money, whether through the NHIS or even some other means of support, then patients can get treatment at a proper price and also service will be kept going,” he said.

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