500 Barracks Women To Benefit From Free Cancer Screening – DEPOWA President

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By Sumaila Ogbaje

Mrs Oghogho Musa, the President, Defence and Police Officers’ Wives Association (DEPOWA), has promised to extend free breast cancer screening to 500 barracks women during the 2024 Breast Cancer Awareness month.

Musa made the pledge during the DEPOWA Breast Cancer Awareness campaign on Saturday in Abuja.

She said the association would not only take the women for screening but would also provide help for those already affected.

“It is a harsh reality that crushes families, friends, and communities. But we are not just statistics, we are stories of hope, courage, and resilience.

“In 2022, the World Health Organisation reported that 2.3 million women were diagnosed with breast cancer and 617,000 died from the disease.

“This equates to a woman being diagnosed every two minutes with breast cancer and dying every 50 seconds from the same disease,” she said.

Musa said that the reality had highlighted the burden of the dreaded disease hence the need to create more awareness as part of activities in October, being the Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

She spoke of the need to break the silence, encourage conversations, and support research on breast cancer.

The Wife of the Vice President, Hajiya Nana-Aisha Shettima, represented by the Director-General, Mariam Babangida Women Development Centre, Dr Asabe Bashir, said that breast cancer had remained the greatest challenge threatening the lives of women.

Shettima said that the cancer often finds the breast a very convenient place to stay, stressing the need for constant awareness among women.

She said this effort by DEPOWA was not only commendable, but also a very inspiring example for other organisations to emulate.

“As we all know, the Campaign for Breast Cancer Awareness, which began in 1985 as a partnership between the American Cancer Society and the Pharmaceutical Division of Imperial Chemical Industries, is marked every year in October.

“Over the years, these campaigns about breast cancer, which is currently the second most commonly diagnosed cancer globally, have successfully raised awareness about the importance of prevention and routine screening for early detection.

“I commend DEPOWA for striving towards contributing to the success of this global campaign to increase awareness among men and women.

“I urge each and every one of us to create awareness and share information about the risk factors associated with breast cancer to promote screening, encourage regular mammograms for early detection and provide resources and share information about available care services and support networks,” she said.

Dr Juliet Ango, a Public Health Physician, said that individuals with positive family history of breast cancer were at higher risk of the disease.

Ango added that age and gender were the most common factors for women, adding that every woman was at risk as long as they keep growing and aging.

According to her, most of people detect cancer late, which is why the end result is usually not favourable. (NAN) (www.nannews.ng)

(Edited by Emmanuel Yashim)

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