Cervical Cancer: When Prevention is the Cure

Even with vaccines and reliable preventives, why do thousands of Indian women die of cervical cancer every year?

offline
Even with vaccines and reliable preventives, why do thousands of Indian women die of cervical cancer every year?

Rani*, 52, lived a happy life with her husband and five children, and even had her own business of rearing buffaloes and supplying milk to households in Rajokri, a village in Delhi, close to the Gurugram border. But Rani’s busy life didn’t spare her the time to focus on her own health. It was only in December 2017, in a chance encounter at a community mobilization programme held by the NGO CAPED (Cancer Awareness, Prevention and Early Detection trust), that she realized the symptoms she was noticing in her body (such as sharp pain while urinating) were actually signs of cervical cancer. Determined to heal, she soldiered on and after a six-month course of medication at Delhi’s All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Rani’s tests in April 2018 delivered the good news—she was cancer-free. For Rani, this health scare left her rattled. Since then, she has taken it upon herself to educate other women in her village about cervical cancer and encourage them to get tested.

Cervical cancer, an insidious, deadly disease, is the second leading cause of cancer deaths among women in India. The numbers speak for themselves—every year, almost 97,000 women are diagnosed with cervical cancer and close to 60,000 die of it. In fact, estimates suggest that cervical cancer will occur in approximately one in 53 Indian women during their lifetime compared with one in 100 women in more developed countries.

Which begs the question, if the problem is so rampant, why do so few people know about it?

 

A cancer-causing virus

Cervical cancer affects a woman’s cervix and is caused by the human papilloma virus (HPV). There are more than 100 kinds of ...

Read more!