fbpx
Thursday, December 26, 2024
25.4 C
Abuja

Breathing hope: Tackling lung cancer in Africa and the Middle East

World Lung Cancer Day is an important opportunity to raise awareness and collectively push for transformative action

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, August 1, 2023/ — Lung cancer, once rare, is now the highest cause of mortality of cancer worldwide. Responsible for more fatalities than breast, colon, and prostate cancers combined. [1]  It claims a life every 18 seconds. In recent years, wealthier countries have recently experienced a significant decline in lung cancer mortality, but in most of the Middle East and Africa incidence and mortality remains high.

It is challenging to gather precise figures on the number of people living with lung cancer in the region, but most recent studies show there were at least 120,000 new cases in 2018, with numbers predicted to have grown since then. [2] [3] Its strong association with tobacco-use leads many people to assume that lung cancer is a condition that only affects smokers. But this is a misperception. Though smoking increases your risk of the disease, anyone can get lung cancer.

The years of life lost to premature deaths, the economic burden of lost productivity and treatment costs, and the long-term effects of illness and treatment on the quality of life of patients and survivors all combine to make lung cancer a serious public health challenge. Our approach to this devastating disease in the Middle East and Africa must change if we are to save lives and improve the overall resilience and sustainability of our health systems.

World Lung Cancer Day is an important opportunity to raise awareness and collectively push for transformative action. Alongside prioritising lung cancer in National Cancer Control programmes and investing in cancer registries to collect sufficient data on the disease, there are three approaches that governments can take to achieve this.

Firstly, screening for lung cancer must be expanded, focusing on high-risk groups. As noted in a 2021 report developed for the Lung Ambition Alliance, nearly a quarter of lung cancer deaths in high-risk populations could be prevented through screening. [4] It is encouraging to note that advances in artificial intelligence (AI) are making screening more accessible and efficient than ever before. To ensure that emerging economies also benefit from these new technologies, AstraZeneca has joined forces with deep-learning developers QURE.ai to integrate AI diagnostics in the early detection of lung cancer in Turkey, the Gulf, Egypt, Lebanon, Iraq and South Africa. With 30,000 scans already completed in these countries, the partnership aims to increase lung cancer detection at an earlier stage – improving the patient journey and ultimately reducing lung cancer mortality rates.

Secondly, cross-border collaboration can help change how we detect and treat lung cancer. Learning from each other’s experiences and mistakes is better for patients and healthcare budgets. Initiatives like Cancer Care Africa, launched in November last year provide valuable insights and build cross-border health ecosystems that address the challenges associated with cancer, including lung cancer. Already, Cancer Care Africa is creating an educational bridge between health care professionals in Egypt and Kenya who work on lung and other cancers, with thousands of health workers benefitting from in-person and virtual peer-to-peer learning which it is hoped can eventually be replicated across the continent.

Finally, sustainability must be at the heart of our health systems. Research indicates that nearly 1 in 10 cases of lung cancer are caused by outdoor air pollution, which means building environmentally friendly health-ecosystems can directly benefit lung cancer outcomes. [5]  Added to that, prevention and early detection programmes save significant resources and energy in the long run, as can new technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) and virtual appointments. This year’s COP28 in the UAE is a critical opportunity to strengthen ties between climate and health, and it is exciting to see health firmly on the agenda. By building sustainable health systems, we can ensure equitable access to lung cancer care for all, and vice versa.

On this World Lung Cancer Day, we call on governments, healthcare providers, the private sector, and NGOs to renew their approach to lung cancer in the Middle East and Africa region. The burden of this disease is formidable, and our collective response must rise to meet it. By implementing effective screening programmes, fostering cross-border collaboration, and investing in sustainable health systems, we can reverse the trajectory of lung cancer and provide hope for patients. Let us unite in the fight against lung cancer and strive for a future where this devastating disease no longer claims the lives of so many.

 

By Esra Erkomay – Oncology Lead, Middle East and Africa, AstraZeneca 

Hot this week

Interpol Issues Red Notices for 14 Nigerians Over Various Crimes

International criminal police organisation (Interpol), has issued Red Notices...

Christmas Message: Pope Francis Calls For Lasting Peace in Ukraine, Ceasefire in Gaza

VATICAN CITY (CHATNEWSTV) — In his Christmas Day “Urbi...

Protests Erupt in Syria After Masked Gunmen Torch Christmas Tree

Protests have erupted in Syria after masked gunmen set...

Magdeburg to hold memorial concert after Christmas market attack

A theatre in Magdeburg is to hold a memorial...

Hatred and Violence Will Not Prevail — German President

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier has called on German society...

Latest

Interpol Issues Red Notices for 14 Nigerians Over Various Crimes

International criminal police organisation (Interpol), has issued Red Notices...

Christmas Message: Pope Francis Calls For Lasting Peace in Ukraine, Ceasefire in Gaza

VATICAN CITY (CHATNEWSTV) — In his Christmas Day “Urbi...

Protests Erupt in Syria After Masked Gunmen Torch Christmas Tree

Protests have erupted in Syria after masked gunmen set...

Magdeburg to hold memorial concert after Christmas market attack

A theatre in Magdeburg is to hold a memorial...

Hatred and Violence Will Not Prevail — German President

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier has called on German society...

Insolvent German Electric Mini Air Taxi Pioneer Finds Investor

German electric plane pioneer Lilium has found an investor...

Gov Mbah Signs N971bn 2025 Budget, Vows Diligent Implementation

Governor of Enugu State, Dr. Peter Mbah, has signed...

EU Urges Restraint, Accountability After Mozambique Elections

BRUSSELS — The European Union has called for calm...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Section

spot_imgspot_img

MORE FROM CHATNEWSTV

In Memory of The ‘Unknown’: The Story of Elechi Igwe 1964-1990 By Chidi Odinkalu

The chances are that his name does not ring a bell to most Nigerians. He was not one of those few privileged Nigerians inflicted...

Op-Ed: Nigeria’s Hostages in Law By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

In 1991, Nigeria was in the full throes of the interminable transition to civil rule programme of General Ibrahim Babangida. The effort by the...

Op-Ed: Tinubu’s Taxing Times By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu A mere four years after emerging from a civil war, in 1974, Nigeria was at the beginning of an oil boom. Then,...

Ghana’s Mahama: Navigating Economic Challenges And Democratic Legacy By Collins Nweke

This week the good people of Ghana will continue adjusting to last weekend news of the return of John, not The Baptist, but Dramani...

Op-Ed: In The Matter of Dele Farotimi Before The Star Chamber By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

Paul Anyebe was a judge of the High Court of Benue State in north-central Nigeria who had a young son with sticky fingers and...

Tax Reform Debate: Is Dogara Positioning Himself for Tinubu’s Vice Presidency in 2027?

By Adnan Mukhtar The complex relationship between President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Vice President Kashim Shettima appears to be fraying, revealing underlying tensions within Nigeria’s...

Op-Ed: Tinubu’s VAT Reforms Will Break Nigeria’s Economy By Adewunmi Emoruwa

In 2019, a 50% VAT hike slowed Nigeria’s economy, pushed millions into poverty, and failed to deliver meaningful revenue growth. Today, new VAT reforms...

Unlocking Tanzania’s Entrepreneurial Potential for a Dynamic Future

By Christine Grau, European Union Ambassador to Tanzania and the East African Community Imagine Tanzania in 15 years: a nation with one of the fastest-growing...

Mallam Umaru Altine: First Mayor of Enugu Municipal Council, 1952-1958, By Femi Kehinde

Benjamin Cardozo, an American jurist and philosopher, has said, “history, in illuminating the past, illuminates the present and in illuminating the present, illuminates the...