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“Early detection may be crucial for successful breast cancer treatment. Therefore, it is important to influence women’s awareness of the symptoms and their attitudes towards treatment,” said Gangane. “Illiteracy, ignorance, poverty and superstition regretfully lead to many women delaying their contact with the health care system too long,” he said.
Gangane performed two studies of women in the mainly rural-dominated district of Wardha in Maharashtra. The first study consisted of a sample of 1,000 women interviewed about socioeconomic factors, knowledge of breast cancer and attitudes to breast self-examination.
The second study was a patient study in the same district where 212 women with breast cancer were included. It turned out that hardly any women in the studies self-examined their breasts. As many as 90 percent of women in rural areas were unaware of the possibility of self-examination of their own breasts, the study found.
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The delay in diagnosis and treatment for more than twelve weeks was seen for 23 percent of patients. The most common reason why women had not sought care earlier was that they had not felt any pain in the breast lump.
Incorrect initial diagnosis or late referral to examination was the most common cause of diagnostic delay, according to the study. Delayed treatment was mostly due to the high costs associated with treatment, it found. However, system delays for breast cancer patients associated with healthcare in the Indian countryside were not much higher than those reported from countries with good access to health care.
“It is urgent to have a national breast cancer program in India, while at the local level, we need to raise awareness among women about breast cancer,” said Gangane.