Skip to main content

Sierra Leone Must Be Prepared To Fight Cancer

LIVESTRONG Team Leader
Cancer is one of the leading causes of death worldwide but unfortunately in Africa, priority is yet to be focused in it as is often seen with diseases like malaria, HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis.
Despite the lapses, African nations can still join the international community and be part in the drive to ensure cancer become a priority in the decision making processes.
The cancer scourge has become so threatening that over 500 delegates from 65 countries in October gathered at the Royal Dublin Society in Dublin to learn, cooperate, and communicate in order to find ways to work together as a community in the fight against cancer.
The LIVESTRONG Global Cancer Summit is an unprecedented step by the Lance Amstrong Foundation to ensure that people worldwide are provided with national control plans by their governments.
Stakeholders in the summit made a statement of unity, reiterating the urgent need for countries to have National Cancer Control Plans, to make a global investment in cancer control, establishing the millennium development goals, and to reduce the stigma associated with cancer.
This is a call to world leaders, and Sierra Leone should embrace the call and act accordingly to ensure that all Sierra Leoneans live a life free of the fear of cancer.
Like HIV/AIDS, Cancer is often seen by Sierra Leoneans as a disease that cannot be cured and therefore fatal. Cancer is always associated with deformity and death, and taking into consideration the unemployment rate and poverty among the people, the disease is horror and stigma on anyone diagnosed with it.
Children are no exception, as compassion clouded the summit when 9-year old Irish kidney cancer survivor, Rosa, whose father donated a kidney to her in the ultimate act of parental love, made a statement.
She is so young and in her bloom, but was hit by the scourge; same is happening with our younger sisters and brothers. But because of the lack of standard medical opportunities to provide diagnostic solutions for cancer ailments, many ended in the red, living behind loved ones.
Among the key issues also discussed was smoking cigarettes, titled “Tobacco: A Smoking Gun in the Cancer Epidemic.” Indeed smoking is a burning issue in this country, taking into cognizance the rate at which young Sierra Leoneans are engaged into the habit. The damage is not only limited to smokers but also second hand smokers (non smokers who unknowingly inhale cigarette smoke from smokers).
Dr. Ala Alwan, a panelist at the summit stated thus: “There is time we “balance health priorities and government resources” as well as “answering the call, making new commitments to cancer control.”
The call by Dr. Alwan is an advice to all nations and Sierra Leone in particular, to see reason and act now!
Fortunately for Sierra Leone the government is paying priority in the health sector and we are now seeing positive measures in the ongoing promotion for affordable and accessible health service for all Sierra Leoneans.
We believe that with this development, the government of Sierra Leone will see the need to make cancer a priority.
We are also calling upon the government of Sierra Leone to join other nations in the fight against cancer and also work according to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
Courtesy of Rowaca Cancer Group

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Kaffu Bullom Chiefdom elects Paramount Chief

Having been elected Paramount Chief of Kaffu Bullom Chiefdom, Porto Loko District, on the 21st January 2010, Paramount Chief Shebora Sheba Gbereh has formally been inaugurated as Paramount Chief of Kaffu Bullom Chiefdom after going through the traditional “Kantha” ceremony. Hundreds of dignitaries, government officials, Paramount chiefs and local people witnessed the coronation ceremony which officially took place under a big traditional cotton tree at Yongoro Town in Kaffu Bullom Chiefdom. Giving the key note address in another ceremony organized after the official Coronation Ceremony Paramount chief Bai Shebora Sheba Gbereh lll thanked God Almighty, his ancestors and his people for his position.

89 Year-Old Dies in Inferno

89 year old woman Janet Abiodu Williams is reported to have died in a blaze on Tuesday while her 22 Williams Street Kissy residence in Freetown was engulfed in fire. According to Bankie Lardge, son of the deceased, the actual cause of the fire is unknown, but it was believed to have started around 8:00-8:30 am that day, when he was feeding his pigs in the pen. “I heard my daughter shouting, fire! Fire!” he said, adding the blaze was first noticed at the top floor of the wooden house where the late Mrs. Williams’ apartment was. “Before I could rush up stairs to rescue my mother, the fire had already taken over the entire apartment, and it was too late for me to rescue my mother,” he lamented. The board house was completely engulfed in flames with properties worth millions of Leones lost. Eyes witnesses said although Fire Force officers later arrived on the scene, the timely intervention of the community people prevented the blaze from extending to nearby houses. Fire accidents are re...

E-cigarettes will be regulated as medicines in Britain

Electronic cigarettes heat liquid nicotine contained in a disposable… (Tim Ireland / Associated…) Electronic cigarettes along with products containing nicotine will be classified and licensed as medication in Britainby 2016. The battery-powered cigarettes, known as e-cigarettes, deliver an experience similar to standard cigarettes by heating liquid nicotine in a disposable cartridge and producing a vapor that can be inhaled. Culled from http://articles.latimes.com/2013/jun/12/business/la-fi-mo-electronic-cigarette-medicine-20130612