-Breast cancer survivors explain that the
disease is anything but a death sentence, reports The ELITES' Chief Reporter.
One
day in 2005, Mrs. Sola Adeoti, then managing director of the defunct City
Express Bank, took her eldest daughter for a routine check-up in a hospital in
the United Kingdom.
After her daughter had been examined, the
doctor suggested that Mrs. Adeoti submit herself to breast screening. For a
woman who assumed she had a healthy lifestyle, the suggestion did not spark
panic. She obliged. But the outcome was the complete opposite of what she
expected: she had a lump in one of her breasts. More ghastly news followed,
with the doctor disclosing that the lump had become cancerous.
“I was devastated when I was told I had the
cancer. The breast
cancer I had was peculiar. It came as tiny dots instead of
lumps and it could not be felt during self-examination,” she said. After
leaving the hospital, she called and informed her husband of the outcome of the
check-up. Her husband immediately sent words to her family and to the brethren
of the Redeemed Christian Church of God. He also told the General Overseer,
Pastor E.O Adeboye, whom he wanted to pray for her. What followed was a grueling
six-month period of treatment, during which she had six rounds of chemotherapy.
Tara Fela Durotoye |
Chemotherapy is the use of drugs to weaken
and obliterate cancer cells in the body, including those at the original cancer
site and those that may have affected another part of the body. The treatment
affects the whole body by going through the bloodstream. It has the potential
for side-effects like anaemia or low red blood cell counts, diarrhoea, fatigue,
fertility problems, hair loss, memory loss, nausea and menopausal symptoms. It
could also cause bone loss, heart problems as well as vision problems.
“It was so traumatic and I must have died a
million deaths. My body was not prepared for that kind of ordeal. Chemotherapy
affects everything in your system, especially the blood cells. I almost lost my
mind,” she recalled.
With
chemotherapy, the cells decrease, but not in her case; instead of the cells
decreasing and dying, the reverse was the case.
By the time she went through her sixth
chemotherapy session, her doctors said they did not think her body could take any more and that there
was no alternative treatment.
Chemotherapy did not just drain Mrs.
Adeoti’s body, it drained her family’s bank account as well. Support, however,
came from members of her family and church.
What
it failed to drain, however, was hope. On account of the doctors’ helplessness,
she was discharged. Mrs. Adeoti had nothing else to cling to other than her
faith. “All I could ask for was a miracle. So, I began to pray to God for
help,” she said. That miracle, she claimed, came through Adeboye. “He laid his
hands upon me and prayed the cancer out of its roots. Two days later, when I
went to see my oncologist, she confirmed that there were no more traces of
cancer cells inside of me. She was astonished because she claimed she had never
had such a case before. My response to her was that I serve a strange God,” she
said gleefully. Five years after, she claims, her doctors gave her a clean bill
of health when she went for her last check-up.
Her grim experience provoked in her an urge
to help people who have the same condition. That urge resulted in the
establishment of MariaSam, a non-profit organisation that aims to set up a
cancer research centre among other things.
Another survivor is Kofo Orija, a medical
doctor who, in 1999, discovered a lump in her right armpit. Initially, she took
it for a boil, but was prompted to see a doctor because it was harder than a
boil and painless. The doctor advised her to get the lump excised. The advice
was heeded. That was by no means the end, as a follow-up examination showed
that the lump had developed into a cancer that had spread to the breast region.
“Later, at my doctor’s insistence, I
arranged to consult an oncologist. That was when it dawned on me that I was up
against something that needed my complete attention!
“I travelled to London to keep my
appointment with the oncologist, and after a barrage of tests and
investigations to determine the nature and type of breast cancer, my surgeon
was ready to operate. I was lucky. The cancer tests showed that the cancer was
still contained within the breast. My surgeon recommended that I had a
lumpectomy and axillary clearance (that is, the removal of the lump with a wide
border around it, and clearing the glands in the armpit),” she explained.
Ten days later, Orija saw her doctor. The
doctor was happy at her progress.
Even then, she still required chemotherapy,
which she underwent. The side-effects were pronounced. “My waist-length hair
fell off in clumps. My nails changed colour to glossy black; my skin turned dry
with splattered black patches and I had nausea and loss of appetite,” she
recalled.
It was a torrid time for her husband, who
was wracked by fear that he would lose his wife. Orija summoned all that was
left inside of her. “My attitude was I would give it my all,” she said. She did
and survived to set up Bloom Cancer Care and Support Centre in 2001.
Orija blames today’s lifestyles as one of
the major factors that predispose people to cancer. “Our lifestyles have
changed. We are eating less natural food and more processed food. Not that
these processed food cause breast cancer, but they are known to be associated
factors. So, because our lifestyle is now exposing us to those associated
factors, there is an increase,” she stressed.
Tara Fela-Durotoye, a make-up artist and
entrepreneur, knows a thing or two about being hit by cancer. While she is not
a victim, she has lost three close relatives to the disease. She lost her
sister, step-mother and mother-in-law. “Although it is over three years now, I
am yet to get over the trauma and pain that I went through. My mother battled
with the disease for two years, during which the doctors had to take off both
her breasts. My mother-in-law was also suffering from it at the same time and
they died one month apart,” she said.
Ebun Anozie, a breast cancer awareness
crusader, is of the opinion that the scourge is gradually taking the shape of
an epidemic. “It is sad that breast cancer is on the increase and people are
dying at an alarming rate. Most families have been affected by breast cancer
and it is unfortunate how people are still in denial. Breast cancer is a
capricious disease and the only way to be aware is to do regular checks,” she
advised. Anozie is the founder of C.O.P.E–Care Organisation Public Enlightment–a
non-governmental organisation devoted to eliminating breast cancer as a major
health challenge among women through awareness creation.
Kehinde Gbelee, a Lagos banker, explained that early detection can save
cost in treatment and also enhance the chances of survival. Kehinde was also
diagnosed with breast cancer ten years ago. “I was lucky that the lump in my
breast was detected on time. Breast cancer is a life-threatening disease and it
is not a cheap disease to have. But if one is able to detect it early, the
treatment is less expensive. So, if you detect it early, the chances of
survival are great and the cost of treatment cheaper,” she said. Gbelee finds
it disturbing that most women are still living in ignorance and thus, have
refused to wake up to the reality of the devastating effect of the scourge.
“Most Nigerian women who have the lump do not go to the hospital. They wish it
away. Some women even put shea butter on it. I came across a well-educated
lady, who told me that she felt that if she has another baby and the baby sucks
from the breast, the lump would go away. The lump will not go away unless
something is done about it. And the good news is that, nine out of 10 lumps are
not cancerous. So women should not be afraid when they discover a lump. The
first thing they should do is see a doctor,” she advised.
Gbelee talks about her experience with
breast cancer with relief having sacrificed the anonymity and privacy of her
family with the hope that other silent victims may be encouraged to face up to
the new reality in their lives with fortitude.
Olukemi Odukoya, a professor of
Pharmacognosy at the University of Lagos, is a breast cancer survivor. She
offered that love is the ultimate panacea in a world full of diseases and pain.
“Breast cancer patients need the love and support of people. And people should
be passionate with love and not with pity. Breast cancer is not a passport to
death. I implore a positive change in the lackadaisical attitude of the health
personnel in the treatment of cancer patients and I advise victims to be
optimistic about life,” she said.
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