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Dr Eman Taryam

‘300,000 children diagnosed with cancer each year’

ABU DHABI, April 4, 2019

More than 300,000 children are diagnosed with cancer each year globally, experts said at the ongoing four-day SIOP (International Society of Paediatric Oncology) Asia 2019 Congress in Abu Dhabi, UAE.

Over 300 international delegates and 92 experts from 26 countries have convened in Abu Dhabi to discuss and debate improving and optimizing treatments throughout the world, during the SIOP Asia 2019 congress, running from April 3 to 6 under the theme 'No child should die of cancer.'

"All children in the world deserve hope for a cure - no matter where they live. Children's vitality is the heartbeat of our world and its future depends on it," said Dr Eman Taryam, president of SIOP Asia 2019.

"The SIOP report 2018 promptly emphasizes that childhood cancer organizations know only too well that the associated cost to treat a child with cancer can be a burden that too many families simply can't overcome. Therefore, we support the need for universal access to essential medicines and healthcare for all children in the world diagnosed with cancer," Dr Taryam said.

"Childhood cancers are often curable but too many children and adolescents have no hope to overcome their disease simply because they were born in a country entrenched in poverty resulting in late diagnosis, lack of access to life-saving essential medicines and appropriate treatment," Dr Taryam  added.

In September 2011, the United Nations (UN) General Assembly issued a Political Declaration recognizing four major Non-Communicable Diseases/NCDs (cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and chronic respiratory disease) as the greatest killers of adults and children. On December 13, 2017, a new report from WHO and the World bank revealed that approximately half of the world's population, including children, do not have access to essential health services and that 800 million people spend at minimum 10 percent of their household income on health-related care.

Approximately 80 percent of our world's children with cancer live in low- middle-income countries, where more than 80 percent of these children die of their disease, while in developed countries like the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Japan and others, more than 80 percent of children survive cancer with hope to live productive and meaningful lives.

Actions to increase childhood cancer survival today represent effective and tangible steps as part of the broader fight against non-communicable diseases and steps that will catalyze global efforts to transform childhood cancer outcomes and ultimately save many more lives of children, now and for years to come.

The WHO Global Childhood Cancer Initiative target is to achieve at least 60 per cent survival for all children with cancer by 2030. This represents an approximate doubling of the current cure rate and will save an additional one million children's lives over the next decade.

In order for this to happen, the International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP) together with Childhood Cancer International (CCI) agree that making childhood cancer a national and global child health priority is a critical first step towards increasing access to treatment and reducing childhood cancer mortality.

All members of Childhood Cancer International and SIOP stand united to make childhood cancer a national and global child health priority to ensure there are adequate resources to meet the basic rights of children with cancer with those basic rights to include:

•    The right to early and proper diagnosis;
•    The right to access life-saving essential medicines;
•    The right to appropriate and quality medical treatments, and;
•    The right to have access to sufficient palliative care;
•    The right to follow up care, services and sustainable livelihood opportunities for survivors.
•    Childhood Cancer International and SIOP are not alone in recognizing the devastating impact of childhood cancer on children and families around the globe. – TradeArabia News Service




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