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How to prevent cancer morbidity, mortality in Nigeria, by DevComs

By Ijeoma Nwanosike
02 March 2023   |   3:09 am
To prevent deaths and infirmity due to cancer in Nigeria would require national and sub-national public awareness and literacy aimed at finding cancer early and treating it.

cancer

To prevent deaths and infirmity due to cancer in Nigeria would require national and sub-national public awareness and literacy aimed at finding cancer early and treating it. As the world marks the second year of the three-year World Cancer Campaign with the theme, ‘Closing the care gap’, the Development Communications Network (DevComs) has called for the institutionalisation of processes to foster cancer literacy amongst the Nigerian public.

Programme Associate of DevComs, Munachiso Unamba, in a statement, said: “We call on health practitioners, inclusive of all cadres, especially health promotion and health education experts, national media organizations, and stakeholders to provide requisite resources as we unite to address the burden of the disease in the country.

“The Nigerian Institute of Medical Research (NIMR) recently raised alarm over the rising figures of cervical cancer in the country. The disease, which is easily preventable and treatable during its early stages have seen a whopping 12,000 cases diagnosed and 8,000 deaths registered annually. Being one of the leading causes of cancer deaths in the country and the second most common cancer amongst females after breast cancer, the country needs to address the low level of public cancer awareness.

“Although general awareness of cancer screening, prevention, and treatment is low among global populations, especially in low and middle-income countries (including Nigeria) with poor literacy rates leading to an increase in cancer prevalence, there is an urgent need to fill this void with proper education as a tool for individual care. This year’s World Cancer Day should bring the attention of the public to how important it is to prevent cancer, find it early, and treat it.”

According to DevComs, in handling any problem, such as life-threatening diseases like cancer, awareness is the first step to its prevention. The Network said Nigeria need to take action against cancer challenges with adequate funding of cancer registries as part of multi-thronged approaches to prevention and care.

It said communities and individuals should not be left out of initiatives aimed at building stronger alliances and new collaborations to make a powerful appeal to governments at all levels in the country. “This will ensure improvement in the public understanding of the severity of cancer, thereby promoting its prevention, detection and cure,” DevComs noted.

DevComs is one of Nigeria’s leading media development organisation with more than two decades of experience in science, public health and social sector advocacy through the media. DevComs won the first ONE Africa Award (2008) based on her innovative strategies in addressing maternal and child in Nigeria.

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