Source: Mail & Guardian Africa
LOCAL doctors told Aida Abdulla her chest pain was an infection, arthritis or muscle strain. But when she travelled to a hospital in Khartoum months later she was diagnosed with breast cancer.
It had also spread to her liver.
Now she is preparing for surgery at the Khartoum Breast Care Centre (KBCC), the only cancer specialised hospital in Sudan, a country of more than 30 million.
"My whole family was upset. Everyone was worried because we have never seen this illness before," said the 49-year-old, dressed in purple and orange robes at the KBCC.
A lack of awareness about the disease and few screening facilities mean that, like Abdulla, who comes from a farming family in White Nile state bordering war-torn South Sudan, many Sudanese women are diagnosed when the cancer is advanced.
She is one of a growing number to seek treatment at the KBCC, a private, not-for-profit hospital founded by Sudanese radiologist Dr Hania Fadl.
Problems like those faced by Abdulla persuaded Fadl to return to her home country after nearly three decades working as a radiologist on breast cancer screening in London.
"During visits to Sudan, I noticed an increase in the number of women affected by the illness and a lack of proper opportunities for diagnosis and treatment," she said.
She was lucky to have both knowhow and finances. The charitable foundation run by her ex-husband, the Sudanese-British businessman Mo Ibrahim, gave the $14 million (12.3 million euros) needed to complete it.
"It was a real struggle. It took a lot of perseverance and a lot of money," the diminutive 68-year-old said, sitting in her office in the reflective blue glass tower that houses the centre, the product of five years' toil.
Ignoring financial advisers' warnings to abandon the project, Fadl pressed on, buying a digital mammogram machine for screening and two anaesthetic machines, and eventually opening the KBCC in October 2010.
Expensive
The centre dominates her life—she lives in an apartment above the spotless corridors of the centre, where women dressed in colourful traditional robes move anxiously from room to room, for mammograms, biopsies and surgery.
Fadl is taking a break to visit London to collect an OBE for services to women's healthcare on October 27, but she is still planning ahead.
She wants patients who can afford the treatment to pay and cover the costs of those who cannot, like Abdulla. The KBCC covered the costs of Abdulla's chemotherapy and will pay for 80% of her surgery fees.
In a clinic decorated with pink ribbons for breast cancer awareness month, Abdulla was exhausted from her chemotherapy four months ago—but grateful.
The $50 the centre charges for a digital mammogram is still too expensive for many, but 40 percent of the major surgeries they carried out were paid for.
Fadl has heard—the health ministry does not keep full records of breast cancer statistics—that of nearly 2,000 women diagnosed in Sudan every year, about 60% die due to lack of proper care.
The problem is a major one not just in Sudan, but in many developing countries, where there are few resources for screening and education.
Women have travelled from South Sudan, Chad and Ethiopia for treatment at the KBCC.
"Two-thirds of the deaths from breast cancer and almost nine in 10 women who die from cervical cancer live in low- and middle-income countries," said Ophira Ginsburg, a World Health Organization breast cancer specialist.
Catching cases early
Even with her state-of-the-art equipment and her new staff, working in Sudan poses unique challenges.
The country has been under a trade embargo by the United States since 1997, imposed over rights abuses and President Omar al-Bashir's support for radical militant groups.
When the digital mammogram machine, bought from a US company, broke down in April, it took 10 weeks to get the permits to allow an engineer to come with spare parts to repair it.
"We have ladies from South Sudan, from Darfur who come through hell to reach here," she said. Unsure of when the machine would be fixed, many had to be told to go back and return later.
But the centre has also had successes.
Samrin Farouk Habbani, a 28-year-old doctor at the centre since 2013, has seen a change in the cases they receive. When she arrived, many patients were advanced, but unlike Abdulla, were inoperable.
They were some of the hardest times of Habbani's career.
"But we have started getting cases in the early stages and people have a better understanding of screening," she said.