The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Tabitha Khumalo decries cancer treatment costs

- BY STAFF REPORTER

FORMER Bulawayo East legislator Thabitha Khumalo has bemoaned the huge cost of cancer treatment in Zimbabwe, saying vulnerable people struggled to meet the costs.

Khumalo, who suffers from breast cancer, said the cancer treatment costs were draining as it was very expensive to access the life-saving treatment.

The former legislator was diagnosed with cancer in April 2020.

“I haven’t received assistance,” she told journalist­s on the sidelines of a Citizens Coalition for Change (CC) rally recently, noting she had been paying the bills from her own pocket.

Since her diagnosis, Khumalo said she has spent “between US$6000 to US$7000” yet requires an additional US$10 000 for surgery.

“I don’t have it and what I’m going to do is just do the best that I can under the circumstan­ces then the rest I will leave it to God,” she said.

Some patients at Mpilo Central Hospital, who were undergoing chemothera­py, said they spend US$150 for drugs that were used for one session.

An oncology nurse at Mpilo’s radiothera­py unit, Blessed Goredema confirmed medication and cancer treatment was ‘always’ expensive, as patients underwent several tests, regiments and clinical cycles.

“In oncology, we always say ‘no meat, no diagnosis’ as we don’t just assume it’s cancer until we are positive.

“After a patient has gone through histology, (a microscopi­c test structure of tissues) we do other investigat­ions – chest Xray, ultrasound scan, blood tests, liver function tests, sometimes a CT scan and various tests for metastasis (the spread of cancer cells from the place where they first formed to another part of the body),” he explained.

“These tests are necessary for diagnosing which stage the patient’s cancer is in so that it can be dealt with accordingl­y,” said Goredema.

“Patients have to buy most of these drugs themselves.

“Sometimes if the radiothera­py machine is working, they can do radiothera­py for free, if they have a social welfare letter and be treated for free. But for chemothera­py, patients have to buy these drugs.

“For the first round, there are about four cycles before moving on to another regimen, which may be four cycles again.

“Patients will be coming in after every 21 days for the first cycle, then go through another cycle after 21 days.

“If you have a letter from social welfare or have medical aid, you don’t pay but we try to assist most of our patients. We also recommend patients to go to social welfare.

“When patients have a letter from social welfare, they don’t use it to buy mediation but use it for investigat­ion tests done in government hospitals, the chest X-ray, ultrasound scan, administra­tive costs and hospital admission.”

However, at the moment, the radiothera­py machines at Mpilo are down and patients have to travel to Harare.

Goredema said the radiothera­py machines were “very delicate” so the malfunctio­n was due to software technicali­ties.

Previously, the hospital had cited issues of battery power but that challenge has been solved.

“This is another cost, as patients have to look for accommodat­ion for maybe six weeks in Harare, and they will be travelling every day up and down.

“Perhaps this software challenge may be solved before midyear or year-end,” Goredema said.

Mpilo is currently offering chemothera­py sessions although the oncologist noted the setting was not conducive, as there were few beds and drugs were administer­ed while patients were sitting.

“We need beds like those in Parirenyat­wa Hospital (in Harare),” he highlighte­d.

Depending on the severity of that cancer, the oncologist said surgery could be done to remove the cancerous lump.

“For instance, we can do a mastectomy, removing the breast,” he said.

“Cancerous cells can move from one point to other, through the lymphatic system. So we have to do mastectomy and remove lymph nodes because they are connected to the lungs and can spread to rest of the body,” he said and underlined there were three modes of cancer treatment – surgery, radiothera­py and chemothera­py.

“These work hand in hand. We do chemothera­py to shrink the tumour, after shrinking, we can do surgery then radiothera­py.

“Chemothera­py is a systematic way of treatment that goes all through the body destroying cancerous cells.

“Radiothera­py is a localised way of treatment, treating that affected area only,” he said.

Goredema noted radiothera­py was done after surgery in case microscopi­c cells were left behind and would be trying to target those localised cells.

However, the oncologist lamented that not all patients who had breast cancer were treated.

“If there’s metastasis, we advise the patient to go home as there’s nothing we can do, though we can do palliative chemothera­py, to reduce signs and symptoms as we try to improve the quality of life of that patient, not necessaril­y say we are treating,” he said.

“We can also do palliative radiothera­py.”

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Thabitha Khumalo

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