Paediatricians say childhood cancer not death sentence

Paediatricians have dispelled common misconceptions about childhood cancer, including the belief that it is contagious and a death sentence.
The paediatricians in an interview on Monday in Osogbo, said that the society lacked adequate knowledge of cancer, especially in children.
Oyetoke Oderanti, a consultant paediatrician at Osun State University Teaching Hospital, attributed people’s reasoning about childhood cancer to a lack of knowledge on cancer.
“Most people believe children are too innocent to be cursed by God. Therefore, they should not have devastating diseases.
“However, this is not the case. Tumours or cancers can occur in anyone once they are genetically predisposed, and some environmental factors can play a role,” said the doctor.
According to the paediatrician, the most common type are lymphoproliferative disease, blood cancer (leukaemias and lymphomas), and solid tumours.
She said most cancer cases were misdiagnosed, which led to underreporting of statistics.
“Many children in low-income and middle-income countries, like ours, die of cancer and it contributes significantly to under-five mortality. The survival rate is about 20 per cent and about 200,000 cases are diagnosed yearly”, she said.
Ms Oderanti, who advised that children diagnosed with blood cancer to take blood medication, noted that “these medicines are not readily available.”
The paediatrician said the best places for cancer management were the tertiary and teaching hospitals.
According to her, there is no specific centre for screening, but Nigeria has the National Institute for Cancer Research and Treatment in Abuja, which promotes early screening.
Ms Oderanti said that more awareness of childhood cancer could be raised through jingles on radio and television stations, town hall meetings, and discussions with religious and cultural leaders.
Oderanti also suggested the training and retraining of health workers, especially at the primary health centres, which could help in the early diagnosis and referrals.
Funmi Adesokan, a consultant paediatrician at the Osun State University Teaching Hospital, identified early diagnosis as challenging due to inadequate facilities and personnel.
“A lot of persons who get in contact with the patient early do not have the knowledge to identify the disease.
“Diagnosis is also expensive and not readily accessible and affordable for patients,” she said.
She also mentioned some complications which existed during the child’s cancer treatment.
“Radiotherapy facilities within the country are scanty. No centre within Osun offers this service,” she said.
She also attributed inadequate awareness or knowledge of childhood cancers, which led to delayed presentation, diagnosis and treatment.
Ms Adesokan also identified poverty, non-specific symptoms of cancer, non-availability of diagnostic services in most hospitals, and skilled personnel as some of the challenges to managing childhood cancer.
“The lack of trust in medical care also worsens the outcome as some people use traditional herbs which do not cure the disease and allow continuous spread till it can no longer be salvaged,” she said.
(NAN)
We have recently deactivated our website's comment provider in favour of other channels of distribution and commentary. We encourage you to join the conversation on our stories via our Facebook, Twitter and other social media pages.
More from Peoples Gazette

Agriculture
FG tasks ECOWAS on leveraging financing strategies for agroecology
The federal government has urged stakeholders in the agriculture and finance sectors in the West Africa region to leverage financing strategies to enhance agroecology practices

Politics
Katsina youths pledge to deliver over 2 million votes to Atiku
“Katsina State is Atiku’s political base because it is his second home.”

Education
TETFund threatens to stop funding non-performing tertiary institutions
The TETFund executive secretary criticised institutions that abandon ongoing projects and give the excuse of failures of previous administrations.

NationWide
Tinubu swears in INEC commissioners, CCB board members
Mr Tinubu performed the swearing-in of the new appointees during the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting.

States
Two women in court for allegedly stealing sanitary pads
Mr Isaac said the defendants forged receipts for 100 transactions of Joy sanitary pads, which amounted to N2.85 million.

Sport
Enyimba hail Abia Warriors FC on continental ticket
Abia Warriors defeated El-Kanemi Warriors 2-1 to cement their place in the 2025/2026 CAF Confederation Cup.

States
Kaduna govt inaugurates committee on basic healthcare fund
Ms Kaltum-Ahmed urged the newly inaugurated members to provide robust oversight for the effective implementation of the fund.

Heading 5
Ex-Bayelsa military administrator dies at 70
He was Bayelsa’s military administrator from June 27, 1997, to July 9, 1998.