Me: I know I don’t look
sick. I don’t feel sick. I am just going for a check-up.
Dere: (looking
puzzled) Why?
Dere: Why go to see a
doctor if you are not sick?
Me: Dere, you don’t go
to see a doctor just because you feel sick. You need to go for regular
check-ups, you know. Regular health exams and tests can help find problems way before
they start. They also can help find problems early on, when your chances for
treatment and cure are better.
Dere: Now, what kind of tests could someone like me go for?
Me: HIV/AIDS, cholesterol,
High Blood Pressure, diabetes, colorectal cancer and prostate cancer.
Dere: I didn’t understand
the last two.
Me: (Hesitatingly )uhmmm…colorectal
cancer is the cancer of the colon, rectum or the appendix. Prostate cancer affects
uhmmm… (really embarrassed now) the male, uuuhmm…
Dere: The male reproductive
system?
Me: (Phew!) yeah…
(An awkward silence)
Dere: Here we are!
Very few people on the queue.
Me: Great. So Dere, I think you should encourage your
wife to come today. They have free breast cancer tests. Pap smears to check for
cervical cancer are also subsidized.
Dere: Ok. I will bring
her in an hour.
Later that afternoon Dere calls me to inform me that he and his wife
are grateful that I encouraged them to go for check-up. Unfortunately, just
like me, she was diagnosed with multiple uterine fibroids. They have been
trying to have a second baby but without success. Since they already had a
child they didn’t really think it was a health issue. Now they know where the
problem is and can get help. The great
news is that both of us do not have breast cancer :)
But not everyone is that lucky. Each year, nearly 200,000 women are
diagnosed with breast cancer; 1 in 8 women will get the disease. Breast cancer
is the most common cancer among women, and it is the second-leading cause of
cancer death among women, after lung cancer. It is projected that most of new
cancer cases in the next decade will occur in under-resourced countries like
Kenya.
Dear readers, it's time to take charge of your health! Kenyans, away
with the attitude that you should only see a doctor when you are sick. Schedule
an appointment with your health care provider to discuss what screenings and
exams you need and when you need them. Women, October is the breast cancer
awareness month. In this regard, there are various free breast cancer clinics
at Mater and Aga Khan Hospitals. Please call them and ask for the dates.
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