| 05 Février 2019
4 February 2019 – After being diagnosed with cancer,  patients in Gaza may often have to wait for months before being able to  receive treatment. Getting a permit to access the health care needed  outside can be a stressful and unpredictable process, and many apply  multiple times before being able to exit. Even then, some patients are  never able to secure the permits they need to access care.
 
 The ability of Gaza’s hospitals to provide adequate diagnosis and  treatment to cancer patients is severely limited due to chronic  shortages of medicines and lack of medical equipment. Nuclear medicine  scanning needed for staging cancers, radiotherapy equipment and some  specialized surgeries are unavailable. More than half of essential  chemotherapy drugs were at less than a month’s supply throughout 2018.
 
 Many patients need health care elsewhere in the occupied Palestinian  territory or abroad. But to leave the Gaza Strip for treatment, they  must obtain a permit from Israeli authorities. This process can take up  to several months, and even then some patients may be unsuccessful in  securing access to travel for health care. In 2018, 39% of patient  applications for permits to exit Gaza for health care were unsuccessful.
 
 64-year-old Samira was diagnosed with uterine cancer in 2016. She  underwent surgery but then required follow-up treatment unavailable in  Gaza. Doctors referred Samira for radiotherapy to East Jerusalem. It  took her more than 6 months and 5 permit applications to finally exit  Gaza in June 2018. “All this time I was suffering from abnormal  bleeding. It was a matter of life and death. Why was I denied a  permit?’’ she says.
 
 Proper cancer diagnosis and effective treatment are essential to improve  the prognosis of patients and their chance of survival. The 5-year  survival rate for breast cancer can exceed 80% if early detection and  essential treatment services are available and accessible. In Gaza,  however, it is significantly lower - only 65% of women with breast  cancer survive 5 years after diagnosis.
 
 Khadijah, a 32-year-old mother of 4, noticed something unusual with her  breast in December 2017. Soon doctors confirmed she had breast cancer.  In January 2018, Khadijah applied for a permit to go to Augusta Victoria  Hospital in East Jerusalem for a specialized investigation – to see  whether the cancer had spread and if so, how far. Her permit was denied.  She started receiving chemotherapy in Gaza, but for optimal treatment  surgery was needed. In July, Khadijah reapplied for a permit, and again  was denied. She decided to change her treatment destination to Egypt.  Khadijah’s second attempt to leave Gaza to Egypt was finally successful.  She had surgery in August 2018, 7 months after diagnosis.
 
 Every cancer patient has the right to health. This means being able to  access quality and acceptable health care and to enjoy the conditions of  life that support staying healthy. Restrictions to accessing essential  health services are one of the major barriers to the right to health for  Palestinians living in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Restrictions  affect cancer patients at a vulnerable point in their lives, when they  need specialist care and services for diagnosis and treatment. The World  Health Organization calls for the protection and fulfilment of the  right to health for all Palestinians.
http://www.emro.who.int/pse/palestine-news/gaza-patients-painful-journey-to-cancer-treatment.html