City
Epaper

Covid effect: Cancer patients who delay treatment are at a great risk

By IANS | Updated: October 24, 2020 16:00 IST

New Delhi, Oct 24 Cancer treatment has taken a massive hit due to the Covid-19 outbreak, with several ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 24 Cancer treatment has taken a massive hit due to the Covid-19 outbreak, with several public health experts flagging an increase in risk of cancer spreading to advanced stages as almost 50 per cent of such cases are reaching the hospitals in later phases.

Dr. Rajeev Kumar, a surgical oncologist at the Rajiv Gandhi Cancer Institute and Research Centre told that in pre-Covid times, the hospital used to cater to 70 per cent patients in early stages of breast cancer, but with lockdown the patients have held themselves back, and now almost 50 per cent of cases are reaching in advanced stages.

"In view of Covid-19 outbreak, cancer treatment has taken a hit and it has increased the risk of cancer having spread to advanced stages. There is a need to take all precautions against Covid, but one should not delay the treatment of cancer as that can be hazardous," said Dr. Kumar.

The delay could be attributed to coronavirus fears. Breast cancer is by far the most common cancer in women worldwide. Delays in starting treatment or breaks can allow cancer cells to grow.

"If there is any sort of abnormality in their breasts through self-breast examination, women need to visit a qualified professional or a well-equipped hospital at the earliest," he added.

Dr. Bhawna Sirohi, lead medical oncologist at Apollo proton cancer centre in Chennai, feared that there will be a "cancer pandemic" after the coronavirus pandemic. "In India, 50-60 per cent patients come in the advance stage due to no awareness and screening, but with the pandemic, it has gone up to 70-80 per cent due to fear of the virus," she added.

Dr. Sirohi further said that some of the patients have become so unwell that they are now untreatable. "Patients with bladder cancer come with very high jaundice. At that stage, their liver does not work, and their performance status is also not good. They are only given bed supported care."

Another oncologist attributed this lack of awareness, casual attitude for symptoms, self-medication, lack of facilities or resources. "Some ladies, due to home-work pressure do not report their symptoms. There is a strong need to publicise the symptoms of cancer among the public to raise the awareness of the most common killer," Dr.

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Rajiv Gandhi Centre for BiotechnologyBhawna sirohichennaiNew DelhiRajeev KumarThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-west
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalDelhi: 8 Accused in Vehicle Theft Cases Arrested During Police Patrolling, Stolen Scooters and Bikes Recovered

MumbaiCockroaches Spotted on Air India Flight from San Francisco to Mumbai; Plane Cleaned in Kolkata

NationalIndia's First Hydrogen Powered Train Coach Successfully Tested in Chennai (Watch Video)

NationalTamil Nadu CM MK Stalin Hospitalised in Chennai Due to Giddiness During Morning Walk

NationalGold Rate on July 2: Prices in India Rise After 2-Day Dip; Check City-Wise 18K, 22K, and 24K Rates Here

National Realted Stories

NationalRG Kar rape-murder: 'March to Secretariat' rally taken out to mark 1st anniversary marred by injuries

NationalRaksha Bandhan: Delhi BJP chief assures all facilities to his sisters living in slums

NationalKamal Nath rebuts ECI’s citation of 2018 petition in Rahul Gandhi voter fraud row

NationalUttarakhand CM assures six months’ ration and financial aid to disaster-hit families

NationalIndia can emerge as a strategic exporter of AI talent to the world: Report