Husbands Advised To Support Wives Diagnosed With Breast Cancer

Scores of women who thronged the latest free Breast screening exercise marking the first anniversary celebrations of the creation of the Nkawkaw Diocese of the Methodist Church, have credited lead anti-breast cancer campaigner, Breast Care International for the consistent life-saving free nationwide screening programs.

The Eastern regional bustling commercial town had been the scene of several free breast screening programs.

Last year, BCI marked its local version of World Cancer Day in the town, among several other preceding programs.

It was no surprise when women, some accompanied by relatives, swarmed the team on arrival with many crediting the organization with heart-warming stories of survival while others confessed they had stepped out of their shadows and were undergoing treatment presently.

For yet another category, it was a tale of coming to terms with reality as the consistent awareness creation and free breast screening programs had brought home the risk factors of the disease and the need to promptly report suspicious lumps for treatment.

A middle aged woman, pleading anonymity, confessed how members of her household had disabused their minds about the long held erroneous view that breast cancer was caused by witchcraft.

“You have no idea how relieved the older women in my family are, after listening to one of your numerous programs”, she said in an apparent reference to yet another Ghanaian myth that accuses older women of witchcraft.

Another woman, full of admiration also told the President of Breast Care International, Dr. Beatrice Wiafe Addai that “but for your free screening and education, I would have been stuck at home under the delusion that the little lump I felt in my breast was nothing to lose sleep about”.