‘Don’t depend on spiritual healing for breast cancer cases’

‘Don’t depend on spiritual healing for breast cancer cases’

The President of the Breast Society, Dr Florence Dedey, has urged breast cancer patients not to confine themselves to  churches and other spiritual quarters while seeking healing.

Dr Dedey said many women died of breast cancer in Ghana because instead of seeking early medical care when they detected signs of the disease, they rather went to prayer camps for healing.

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 “Patients sometimes stay in prayer camps and churches for months and even years when they detect the problem, and when it gets deteriorated they report to the hospital when we can do less about it,” she lamented.

The Breast Society

Dr Dedey was speaking at the Annual General Meeting of the Breast Society in Accra to take stock and review programmes and activities towards a more effective performance in dealing with cases of breast cancer.

The Breast Society was inaugurated in January 2018 to bring health professionals from across Ghana to work together to improve the management and outcomes of breast diseases, especially cancer.

The annual general meeting, which assembled relevant stakeholders who dealt with breast cancer cases, was dubbed: “Breast diseases - closing the gap between patients, health workers and scientists”.

Addressing the meeting, the President of the society, Dr Dedey, said fatalities in breast cancer cases could be avoided if conditions were reported early to the hospitals for treatment and patients did not solely rely on spiritual healing.

She, therefore, advised that symptoms should be reported to the hospital early for treatment.

According to her, the society will collaborate with religious and herbal practitioners to ensure that women with breast cancer seek medical care early.

She said majority of breast cancer patients reported to the hospital at the critical stage of the disease only after spiritual interventions had failed.

‘We are losing women’

Dr Dedey said breast cancer was affecting relatively younger women in Ghana lately, and with the late presentations and non-compliance to treatment, the outcomes had proven unpleasant.

“Families are losing mothers, wives, sisters and daughters. We are all losing relations and friends and the society and nation at large is worse off for this,” she said.

Breast cancer continued to be the leading cause of cancer deaths in women in Ghana, with about 2,000 deaths every year, she said, adding that about 4,000 new cases were also reported every year.

Dr Dedey said the late presentation of the disease to the hospital decreased the chances of patients surviving the condition, urging patients to seek early treatment even when they sought spiritual intervention.

She said the Breast Society would bring together health professions to work together for the good of those affected by the disease.

The meeting, she said, formed part of the initiatives by the society to bring health professionals and other stakeholders from various parts of Ghana to work together to improve the management and outcome of breast cancer.

“We believe that bridging those gaps, especially among patients, health workers, scientists and other stakeholders will allow for a more holistic approach to care, and hence better outcomes of the management of breast cancer,” she stated.

Global case

A former Deputy Director of the Ghana Health Service, Dr Gloria Quansah Asare, said breast cancer remained a global health concern, with women having the highest risk.

In Ghana, she said, it was the commonest female cancer among mainly 40-50-year olds, adding that “survival in better-resourced areas and countries is far better compared to what happens in Ghana and other developing countries”.

“The overall five years survival in better-resourced areas is above 80 per cent, while ours is estimated to be about 40 per cent,” she said.

Dr Quansah Asare said late stage presentation of breast cancer cases was common and estimated to be about 67 per cent or higher in Ghana.

“This high proportion of patients seen with advanced disease is what influences the overall survival pattern negatively,” she said.

She said stakeholders, therefore, needed to work together to find a holistic approach to manage and treat breast cancer.

She commended the Breast Society for taking the lead to discuss ways to deal directly with issues relating to better survival of breast cancer patients.

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