KATHMANDU: Annually more than 2,000 children in the country are afflicted with one or the other type of cancer.
This information was shared in the Awareness Program on Prevention of Cancer among Children.
The program was organized under the joint aegis of Kathmandu Metropolitan City (KMC)’s Department of Health, the Lions Club of Kathmandu Harati Mata, Kashthamandap, UN Park and Gurans on Tuesday.
On the occasion, the speakers said that 300 thousand children worldwide and more than 2,000 in Nepal suffered from various types of cancer every year.
Dr Anjali Pandit of Nepal Cancer Hospital and Research Center, Harisiddhi, shared that children mostly suffered from blood cancer. She said besides blood cancer, they also developed cancer of the brain, backbone, glands, eyes, bone, kidney and muscles.
Dr Pandit stressed on timely treatment if symptoms like lump is seen in the neck, bleeding from the gum, spots in the eyes and tumors in the cheek as these are the symptoms of cancer. She added that cancer can be cured through treatment if the condition is diagnosed in time.
Cancer in the girl child can be cured in two years and that in the boys in three years through timely treatment.
Dr Ashish Lal Shrestha of Kathmandu Medical College and Teaching Hospital said that it is possible to treat cancer in children in the country itself provided that the condition is diagnosed and treated in time. He said cancer is seen among children if the mother consumes alcohol and smokes during pregnancy, due to radiation and harmful chemicals, living in polluted environment and excessive use of pesticides and genetic disturbances seen in the embryonic stage.
KMC’s Department of Health chief Balaram Tripathi said that many children in Nepal also are found suffering from various types of cancer which is a global problem and the KMC has been conducting several public awareness programs for its prevention.
He expressed the commitment of the metropolis to move ahead together collaborating with different social organizations for improving the health of the Kathmandu denizens.
Lions Club of International District 324 H district governor Dinesh Prasad Shrestha said cancer in children can be prevented through timely diagnosis and treatment.
Bikas Man Singh, the Coordinator of the Cancer Awareness Program, Lions Club of International District 324 H, stated that the situation of cancer in children in Nepal was alarming but only a few cases reached health institutions seeking treatment. He added that only 30 percent of those reaching the health institutions continued with the treatment.
Ashok Man Maharjan of the Lions Club of Kathmandu Harati Mata said the Lions Club of International has been conducting weeklong awareness raising program since July 1.
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