2,000 Gazans diagnosed with cancer annually

The head of the oncology department at the European Gaza Hospital, Ahmed Al-Shurafa, said on the anniversary of World Cancer Day that around 8,644 new cancer cases registered in Gaza during the recent years, as the besieged enclave records new 2000 cases annually.

Al-Shurafa stated that breast cancer is the most common in the Gaza Strip, at a rate of 18% among women and men, followed by colon, leukemia, thyroid, and lung cancer.

He highlighted that cancer patients in the Gaza Strip suffer as a result of the shortage of cancer drugs and many other patients are transferred to hospitals abroad because of the total absence of their needed medicines, while some cases cannot travel as a result of the blockade imposed by Israel on the Gaza Strip in general and the obstacles imposed by the Israeli occupation on travelers through crossings in particular.

"Among the challenges facing patients, in addition to the drug crisis and the travel ban, is the lack of devices in the Gaza Strip for nuclear and radiological scanning to detect different types of cancer, which delays the diagnosis of the disease in its early stages," he said.

Source : Safa