OSBC | Osun State Broadcasting Corporation
  • Home
  • About
    • Our History
    • Management Board
    • Management Team
    • Other Management Staff
    • OSBC Organogram
  • Contact
  • LIVE TV/RADIO
    • 104.5FM RADIO LIVE
    • OSBC TV LIVE
    • REALITY 96.3FM RADIO LIVE
    • ORISUN 89.5FM LIVE
    • 104.5FM Radio Live Video
    • Orisun FM Live Video
    • REALITY Radio Live Video
  • PODCAST
    • Saturday Morning Treat – SMT
    • Dateline
    • Newsmaker
    • In the Newsroom
    • Kajoso
    • Ojumo’re
    • Newspaper Today
  • Portal
    • Staff Email
  • Osun state Website
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
    • Our History
    • Management Board
    • Management Team
    • Other Management Staff
    • OSBC Organogram
  • Contact
  • LIVE TV/RADIO
    • 104.5FM RADIO LIVE
    • OSBC TV LIVE
    • REALITY 96.3FM RADIO LIVE
    • ORISUN 89.5FM LIVE
    • 104.5FM Radio Live Video
    • Orisun FM Live Video
    • REALITY Radio Live Video
  • PODCAST
    • Saturday Morning Treat – SMT
    • Dateline
    • Newsmaker
    • In the Newsroom
    • Kajoso
    • Ojumo’re
    • Newspaper Today
  • Portal
    • Staff Email
  • Osun state Website
No Result
View All Result
OSBC | Osun State Broadcasting Corporation

WHO launches strategy to eliminate cervical cancer

OSBC_Admin by OSBC_Admin
November 17, 2020
in headlines
0
0
SHARES
12
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The World Health Organisation on Tuesday launched a strategy to rid the world of cervical cancer, stressing that broad use of vaccines, new tests and treatments could save five million lives by 2050.

“Eliminating any cancer would have once seemed an impossible dream, but we now have the cost-effective, evidence-based tools to make that dream a reality,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a statement.

More than half a million new cases of cervical cancer are diagnosed around the world each year, hundreds of thousands of women die from the disease, and the WHO warns will rise significantly in the years to come without action.

The good news is that cervical cancer, which is caused by the human papillomavirus (HPV) — a common sexually transmitted infection — is preventable with reliable and safe vaccines, and also curable if caught early and adequately treated.

During the WHO’s main annual meeting last week, all 194 member countries agreed to a plan towards eliminating the cancer.

– ‘Huge milestone’ –
“This is a huge milestone,” WHO Assistant Director-General Princess Nothemba Simelela told a virtual press briefing.

“For the first time the world has agreed to eliminate the only cancer we can prevent with a vaccine, and the only cancer which is curable if detected early,” she said.

Urgent action is needed.

The WHO forecasts that if countries do not act swiftly, the number of global cases could jump from 570,000 in 2018 to 700,000 by 2030, while deaths could increase from 311,000 to 400,000 during the same timeframe.

Simelela insisted “decades of neglect” were responsible for the high number of cervical cancer deaths, especially in low and middle-income countries, where there are twice as many cases and three times as many deaths from the disease as in wealthy nations.

While most high-income countries have introduced wide-spread vaccination, testing and treatment, access has remained far more difficult elsewhere, in part due to the high cost of vaccine doses.

“If we can improve access for low and middle-income countries we really can be on the road to elimination,” she said.

The strategy announced Tuesday calls on countries by 2030 to ensure that at least 90 per cent of girls to be fully vaccinated against HPV before they turn 15.

It also calls for at least 70 per cent of women to be tested for cervical cancer by the time they are 35 and again by 45, and for at least 90 per cent of women diagnosed with the disease to receive treatment.

– COVID hit vaccinations –

While a range of recent advances promise to simplify testing, push down costs and ease access, WHO acknowledged that its new strategy comes at a challenging time, with the world focused on battling the Covid-19 pandemic.

The coronavirus crisis has interrupted vaccination, screening and treatment for cervical cancer, while border closures have reduced availability of supplies.

“We probably lost a sizable number of women,” Simelela said.

She added though that the testing infrastructure and systems being created for Covid-19 could hopefully be maintained for screening for other diseases, including cervical cancer.

“We can make history to ensure a cervical cancer-free future,” she said.

Previous Post

BREAKING: Buhari meets Buratai, Adamu, other service chiefs

Next Post

Crown FC player slumps, dies during friendly match in Ogun

Next Post

Crown FC player slumps, dies during friendly match in Ogun

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

OSBC | Osun State Broadcasting Corporation

© 2023 OSBC - Osun State Broadcasting Corporation | Designed by: ICT UNIT.

Navigate Site

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • LIVE TV/RADIO
  • PODCAST
  • Portal
  • Osun state Website

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
    • Our History
    • Management Board
    • Management Team
    • Other Management Staff
    • OSBC Organogram
  • Contact
  • LIVE TV/RADIO
    • 104.5FM RADIO LIVE
    • OSBC TV LIVE
    • REALITY 96.3FM RADIO LIVE
    • ORISUN 89.5FM LIVE
    • 104.5FM Radio Live Video
    • Orisun FM Live Video
    • REALITY Radio Live Video
  • PODCAST
    • Saturday Morning Treat – SMT
    • Dateline
    • Newsmaker
    • In the Newsroom
    • Kajoso
    • Ojumo’re
    • Newspaper Today
  • Portal
    • Staff Email
  • Osun state Website

© 2023 OSBC - Osun State Broadcasting Corporation | Designed by: ICT UNIT.

Enable Notifications OK No thanks