Niger Delta
NGO Screens 200 Women For Cancer In Edo
No fewer than 200
women in Okpekpe, Etsako East Local Government Area of Edo, have benefited from a free-breast-cancer screening organised by a Lagos-based-cancer centre, Sebeccly Cancer Care.
The Executive Director of the organisation, Dr Omolola Salako said that two of the screened women were confirmed to have breast cancer.
“We are conducting cancer screening and we have detected two-breast abnormality.
“One is a confirmed breast-cancer patient while the second has a breast-cancer abnormality and we are referring them to a general hospital for surgery,” she said.
Salako said that the centre did not only screen, but also ensured that those confirmed to have breast cancer were treated and paid for.
“We don’t just screen and abandon patients because the two women that had been confirmed as having cases of breast cancer were diagnosed a while ago, but they couldn’t afford the cost of treatment.
“So, it is such people that matter to us and are most needed to be treated.
“We are not going to abandon them, we are starting here, charity begins at home, the screening is here and the indigenes must benefit, ”she said.
Salako noted that the centre annually used to screen no fewer than 2,000 women at different breast-cancer campaigns across the country.
She said that the present cancer awareness cam-paign was to provide free breast and cervical cancer awareness and screening for women in the council area.
She said that the initiative was also aimed at bringing information about cancer to the grassroots.
“We felt that we needed to contribute to the screening and spread the message about cancer.
“The best way is not only by talking but by actually doing something positive that will make it have impact on the women, ”she said.
She urged well-meaning Nigerians, governments and corporate organi-sations to support the fight against breast cancer by donating money to support the treatment of financially constrained breast-cancer patients.
“We urge them to also support the building of the first Cancer Survivorship Centre in Nigeria,” Salako said.
The Head of Programs and Advocacy at the Centre Mr Salaam Afolabi, said that breast cancer was the most common cause of cancer death worldwide.
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