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7 adults die every hour, 8 children die of cancer daily in PH, says group

By: Nikko Dizon - Reporter / @NikkoDizonINQ Philippine Daily Inquirer / 07:16 AM September 25, 2017

Every day in the Philippines, there are 11 new cancer cases.

Seven adults die of cancer every hour and eight children die of this disease every day.

These alarming statistics, says the Cancer Coalition of the Philippines (CCP), show that cancer is a “growing
and serious public health concern” in the country and that Congress should give priority to the passage of a
law that will increase survivorship among Filipinos.

NATIONAL CANCER CONTROL ACT


That is the proposed National Integrated Cancer Control Act, which the House of Representatives’ committee
on health begins to tackle on Monday, according to coalition spokesperson Paul Perez.

“The meeting (on Monday) should push them to come up with a substitute bill covering an integrated national
cancer control act,” Perez told the Inquirer on Sunday.

He said there were around 30 versions of the bill in the House.

‘PROJECT: BRAVE KIDS’


Perez heads “Project: Brave Kids,” which attends to children with cancer.

He launched the project after his son fought—and won—a battle with leukemia.
Even with the statistics, there are still “many more (cancer cases) that remain uncounted, unrecorded and
unreported,” said journalist Kara Magsanoc-Alikpala.

“With this data, we hope Congress sees cancer as an urgent health concern that needs legislative action now
to address the different gaps in the cancer control program,” said Alikpala, herself a cancer survivor.

She said there had been “inroads” in the past seven years in the effort to put together a law aimed at saving
more Filipinos from cancer death.

“But it’s still outpaced by the increase in incidences of cancer and deaths due to cancer,” she said.

ASSISTANCE FUND
A salient provision in the bill is the proposal for a P30-billion cancer assistance fund that will “support the
medical and treatment assistance programs for patients.”

This emphasizes the financial burden that cancer imposes on patients and their families—regardless of their
economic status.

“There is a high incidence of treatment noncompliance and abandonment due to high out-of-pocket payment
in relation to the financial capacity of patients and their families,” said CCP member Daisy Cembrano.

Among those who have filed versions of the proposed National Integrated Cancer Control Act are Senators JV
Ejercito and Sonny Angara, and Representatives Alfred Vargas, Karlo Nograles, Jericho Nograles, Chiqui Roa-
Puno and Bernadette Herrera-Dy.

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