Iraqi children’s hospital fighting to keep cancer patients safe from COVID-19

Tue, Jul 14, 2020
By publisher
2 MIN READ

Foreign

BASRA Children’s Hospital, which specialises in cancer treatment, has cut admissions by half since May due to the novel coronavirus, its director said.

Ali Abulhussein al-Idani said the hospital is battling to keep children safe from infection with a new isolation ward and testing of staff.

Al-Idani said that since June, five children were diagnosed with the illness upon admission to the hospital, including a six month-old child, who died of complications.

“The immune system of cancer patients is very weak, it can be close to nil.

“If a patient (with cancer) catches the coronavirus, he or she will be affected badly and rapidly,’’ he added.

The hospital has boosted ward cleaning and limited visitors to just one per child.

It is treating more patients as outpatients and routinely testing staff.

A Health Ministry spokesman was not immediately available for comment.

Iraq has registered 81,757 cases of the novel coronavirus including 3,345 deaths as of Tuesday.

For parents of children with cancer, the fear of them contracting coronavirus is intense.

Awatef Mohamed, sitting next to her four-year-old daughter, Iman, who is being treated for kidney cancer, said: “If she falls ill with the coronavirus, her health condition will deteriorate.

“She’ll have to stop chemotherapy to be treated for this other disease’’.

Cancer is one of the biggest causes of death in the country, according to a 2019 World Health Organisation (WHO) report.

The incidence of cancer is increasing in Iraq and many people suspect contamination from weapons used in years of war and the accompanying pollution could be a cause.

A lack of access to cancer treatment, the high price of cancer drugs and a generally weak healthcare system in Iraq exacerbate the problem.

Basra Children’s Hospital was founded in 2010 with the support of foreign donors and over the last 12 months admitted about 2,550 patients.

NAN

– Jul. 14, 2020 @ 19:19 GMT

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