Though not specifically mentioned in the WHO report, Pakistan is understood to figure among the low- and middle-income countries ill-equipped to put up a fight against cancer. Lack of primary care and referral system in the country — mainly due to paucity of funds — is what makes early detection of cancer difficult, and thus the battle against the disease tougher. Let alone the rural parts of the country, many an urban centre lacks proper facilities to treat the deadly disease. Patients in far-flung areas are the worst suffers. A recent news report on the plight of cancer patients in Balochistan, where there is no cancer-treating facility, is a serious case in point.
The WHO report, meanwhile, points out that one in five people worldwide would face a cancer diagnosis in their lifetime, and this makes the disease a global burden. It, however, indicates that controlling cancer is not too costly an affair, and an investment of $25 billion over the next decade could save seven million lives from cancer. This is where the report puts onus on the role of affluent countries of the world in the fight against cancer.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 7th, 2020.
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