Thursday, 1 March 2012

300 Cancer detection camps planned across state

Roko Cancer, a UK-based organisation, has announced to hold 300 medical camps, especially to diagnose cancer, in Punjab during the next six months beginning from March 1.

Talking to The Tribune from London, global ambassador of the organisation Kulwant Singh Dhaliwal said 150 camps would be organised in the Malwa region, while 75 each in the Majha and the Doaba regions of the state.

He said, “We have decided to hold 300 medical camps at various locations throughout the state. Apart from diagnosis of cancer, other ailments like blood pressure and diabetes would also be checked and ECG conducted on the needy patients.” Free medicines would be distributed to the needy patients, he added.

He also announced to hold a walk to create cancer awareness among the masses on March 9 on the eve of Women’s Day in Chandigarh, besides holding a breast cancer detection camp.

Wednesday, 22 February 2012

National Cancer Control Programme

Cancer is an important public health problem with 7 to 9 lakh cases occurring every year. At any point of time, it is estimated that there are nearly 25 lakh cases in the country. Four lakh deaths are estimated to occur every year due to cancer. Forty per cent of the cancers in the country are due to tobacco. Hence Tobacco related cancers are very common among males, namely, cancers of the lungs and oral cavity. Among women, cancer of uterine cervix and breast are common.

The National Cancer Control Programme was launched in 1975-76 with the objectives of primary prevention, early detection, treatment and rehabilitation. In order to cater to the changing needs of the disease the programme has undergone three revisions with the third revision in December 2004. Under the revised programme, the primary focus is on correcting the geographic imbalance in the availability of cancer care facilities across the country. The scope of the programme and the quantum of assistance under the various schemes have been increased.

There are 5 schemes under the Revised Programme:

· Recognition of new Regional Cancer Centres (RCCs) by providing a onetime grant of Rs.5.00 crore.

· Strengthening of existing RCCs by providing a one-time grant of Rs.3.00 crore.

· Development of Oncology Wing by providing enhanced grant of Rs.3.00 crore to the Government institutions (Medical Colleges as well as government hospitals).

· District Cancer Control Programme by providing the grant-in-aid of Rs.90.00 lakh spread over a period of 5 years.

· Decentralised NGO Scheme by providing a grant of Rs.8000 per camp to the NGOs for IEC activities.

Guidelines for the durable scheme are available on the officers report of the Ministry of Health:

· As of now, there are 25 Regional Cancer Centres providing comprehensive cancer care services. There are 210 institutions possessing radiotherapy installations.

· A National Strategic Task Force has been constituted to formulate a strategy for the National Cancer Control Programme for the Eleventh Five year Plan.

· Training: In order to increase the capacity of the health staff at all levels of health care, training manuals have been developed in cancer control, tobacco cessation, cytology and palliative care.

· Onconet-India: C-DAC Trivandrum has been entrusted with the responsibility of preparing the DPR for Operationalisation of Onconet India. Under the project all 25 RCCs will be linked with each other and also each RCC would in turn be linked to 5 peripheral centres.

· Membership of IARC: India has become a member of the International Agency for Research in Cancer that shall provide a fillip to cancer research in the country.

· National Cancer Awareness Day : November 7th, the birth anniversary of Madame Curie is observed as the National Cancer Awareness Day. Number of banners are displayed for creating awareness among the general masses about cancer on the day.

Health Minister's Cancer Patient Fund Under "RAN"

The "Health Minister's Cancer Patient Fund" (HMCPF) within the Rashtriya Arogya Nidhi (RAN) Scheme has also been set up in 2009. In order to utilize the HMCPF, it is proposed to establish the revolving fund like RAN in the Various Regional Cancer Centre(s) (RCCs) which are getting fund for equipments from Cancer Programme of Govt. of India. Such step would ensure and speed up financial assistance to needy patients and would help to fulfil the objective of HMCPF under RAN. The Financial Assistance to the Cancer Patients up to Rs.1,00,000/- (Rs.one lakhs only), would be processed by the concerned Institute/Hospitals on whose disposal, the revolving fund has been placed. The cases of financial assistance above this limit would be referred by the Hospitals/Institutes for assistance from Central Funds. Initially, 27 Regional Cancer Centres have been proposed, for whom revolving funds of (Rs.10 lakhs) have been released.

Monday, 30 January 2012

Videos of Breast screening in Punjabi - For PATIENTS

These videos have been made for Common people . They describe the breast screening process and have been made by the NHS, which is the health system of England.

Punjabi Speaking Breast Screening Programme Videos



  • Patient module 1: Breast Anatomy

  • Patient module 2: Going for Screening

  • Patient module 3: Mammography

  • Patient module 4: Further Assessment
  • Thursday, 19 January 2012

    Election Manifestoes

    Let us analyse election manifestos of the major parties for the coming 2012 Legislative Assembly elections with respect to the problem of Cancer.

    Congress: Says will set up 3 cancer hospitals, 5 medical colleges and six drug de-addiction centres in the Malwa region; Provide medicines at subsidized costs to the needy

    PPP: Cancer hospital to be set up in Bathinda ( in its 100 days Agenda)

    SAD:

    Steps taken by Punjab Government

    1. A dedicated fund would be deposited in the local account of the newly setup Max Super Specialty Health Care Centre Hospital at Bathinda and Mohali and managed by the Rogi Kalyan Smiti. It would be exclusively utilized for financing the medical treatment of economically poor patients suffering from cancer. According to the CM,the specific fund would comprise Rupees 3 crore as upfront consideration already paid by the Max Health Care in addition to 5 per cent of gross revenue annually. What needs to be seen is how this is being implemented - Whether the poor are actually being financed by the Rogi Kalyan Smiti or not.

    2. An ultra modern hospital for the treatment of Cancer would be soon established at Bathinda under Baba Farid University of Health Sciences. Question remains when the acutal implementation will happen.

    3. Govt. hospitals in the regions do not even have the machinery for cancer detection let alone doctors to give medical care. Steps should be taken by the Govt. in this regard urgently. Mammography machines should be available in each district or the prices in private hospitals should be controlled in Public Interest.

    In Punjab, Crowding Onto The Cancer Train by Daniel Zwerdling

    Every night at about 9:30, Train No. 339 pulls into the shabby station in the northern Indian farm town of Bathinda, in Punjab state.

    Locals call No. 339 by a chilling name — "the cancer train." It routinely carries at least 60 cancer patients who make the overnight journey with their families to the town of Bikaner for treatment at the government's regional cancer center.

    People say they never used to see so many cancer patients in this farm region. Cancer was considered an urban disease, suffered by people who lived in cities choked with industry and pollution.

    But research by one of the most respected medical institutes in India recently found that farming villages using large amounts of pesticides have significantly higher rates of cancer than villages that use less of the chemicals.

    Researchers caution that the findings do not prove that pesticides are causing cancer. But they say the passengers crowding the cancer train are part of a medical mystery that could have repercussions around the world: Are the modern farming methods brought by the so-called Green Revolution of the 1960s and '70s making people sick?

    'Everyone Is Getting Ill'

    On a recent evening, just before the train arrives, waiting passengers wrapped in shawls sit glumly on the bare pavement. Vendors hawk tea and chapattis.

    "He has blood cancer," says one man, explaining his upcoming journey by gesturing at his skinny, pale 16-year-old son, Jassa Singh, beside him. Another man points toward his little boy, and says bone cancer has attacked his hip.

    A gaunt but dignified-looking man wearing a bright yellow turban says he is going to Bikaner for treatment of cancer in his throat. "It's difficult to talk," he says, pushing a button in a device inserted in his throat that makes his voice sound like a computer synthesizer.

    They are all from farm families. "The thing is, production is good," one of them says. "But everyone is getting ill. The health of people around here is deteriorating."

    The Green Revolution swept across Punjab and much of Asia in the 1960s and '70s. In the context of the times, "green" did not refer to what it means today — organic, pesticide-free farming methods. This Green Revolution was led by a loose network of politicians, scientists and philanthropists in the U.S. and other nations, driven by a combination of humanitarian zeal and Cold War-era politics.

    They were convinced that if farmers in developing countries like India switched from traditional methods to the American way of farming — with pesticides, fertilizers and high-yield seeds — they could fight hunger and prevent the region from going communist.

    The Green Revolution helped India transform itself from a nation that chronically begged for food aid to one that often exports grains. But many farmers in Punjab now wonder if they're paying a price.

    Troubling Signs Led To Study

    In the Punjab village of Jajjal, farmer Jarnail Singh played a role in spurring university researchers to study whether the Green Revolution has been hurting the public's health.

    Singh says he noticed one of the first troubling clues in the late 1980s and early '90s: Peacocks — India's national bird — disappeared from the fields. Over the years, seven people in his family got cancer — and three of them died. People in Jajjal and surrounding villages got cancer, too.

    Singh says he saw that many fellow farmers were overusing pesticides and not handling the toxic chemicals safely.

    Many farmers "get totally covered" by pesticides when they spray them — "in their hair, on their body, in their eyes," he says. "And that got me thinking about, why aren't we really looking at that, how that may affect the farmers?"

    Critics say government leaders pushed the Green Revolution before they had safeguards in place to protect the population. Although pesticide containers have warning labels, many farmers in countries like India cannot read well. Government agents hold workshops to teach farmers how to use chemicals safely, but those infrequent lessons may not sink in.

    Overuse Of Pesticides

    Some farmers in the area say they spray their crops a dozen times or more a season, not one or two times as the pesticide labels instruct. And many say they do not bother wearing protective clothing.

    Singh started speaking out about the issue, first at a meeting in the village square, and then at environmental conferences. Several years ago, medical researchers at Punjab's School of Public Health, at the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, launched a study to see if the fears were founded.

    The study, based mainly on interviews with thousands of families in farming villages, and reviews of their medical records, was released last year. It found that Singh's hunch was right: There was a significantly higher rate of cancer in villages where pesticide use was heavy.

    But the head of the School of Public Health who supervised the study, Rajesh Kumar, cautions that the research does not prove that pesticides were the culprit. He says it is important to remember something about health studies in general: They are difficult to carry out and often inconclusive, especially in developing countries.

    Even in the U.S., which keeps better medical records than most countries, it takes years of research to link a certain chemical in the environment to cancer or other health problems in people. Even then, an epidemiological study can generally suggest a link but not prove it.

    More Years Of Research Needed

    Kumar says it would take many more years to demonstrate whether pesticides actually triggered the elevated cancer rates they found in some farming areas.

    "It could be industrial pollution," says Kumar, mulling the other possibilities. Or perhaps as many farmers have improved their standard of living, they have smoked more tobacco and changed to unhealthful diets. Or a combination of all those factors, including pesticides, might have driven cancer rates higher, Kumar adds.

    Meanwhile, other recent research suggests that pesticides might be linked to other health issues in Punjab. One study shows that children in villages that use high levels of pesticides score worse on memory and coordination tests.

    Scientists caution that this research is not conclusive. But it's potentially troubling, particularly as the world's population keeps booming and the pressure remains for farms to produce high yields.

    Cancer Train Commute Goes On

    The cancer train lurches to a stop in Bikaner's station, under a fat, full moon, at 6 a.m. The passengers file silently down the platform, as though they are sleepwalking, and line up for the motorized rickshaws idling outside.

    Soon, scores of them are crowding the hallways of the Acharya Tulsi Regional Cancer Treatment and Research Institute. There is a long line at one counter to get appointments. A crowd presses against another counter, where an employee fills out vouchers that will enable the patients to get reimbursed by the national railway for taking the cancer train.

    Jassa Singh, the 16-year-old who has blood cancer, says he is "feeling well," but he and his family look anxious. He is about to get his blood test, which will tell him whether the treatments are working — or whether his life might be running out.

    When they get the results, his family and most of the other passengers will head right back to the station for the eight-hour ride home — on the cancer train.

    Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=103569390

    Documentary on Cancer in Punjab



    Friday, 6 January 2012

    Pamphlet in English on Cancer

    English Cancer Pamphlet

    Pamphlet in Punjabi on Cancer

    Punjabi Cancer Pamphlets