Many children who live outside Damascus have to travel long distances to the hospital, which is the only facility in the country that treats children suffering from cancer. Two-year old Aya, another patient, lives in Dar’a and visits the hospital with her mother and grandmother every 2 months for treatment. Many families make the journey to Damascus from Syria’s north-eastern and eastern governorates. Travelling long distances is both expensive and dangerous, since families may have to use their savings to pay for travel or cross conflict lines to obtain life-saving health care.
“What makes helping this facility so urgent is the increasing number of patients. Every month 60 to 70 new children arrive at the hospital in the hope of being treated for free, because their families are simply unable to pay for cancer care,” said Ms Hoff.
The Syrian Cancer Registry estimates that one person in a thousand is diagnosed with cancer each year, with children accounting for 10% of the total number of cases. Breast cancer accounts for 30% of cancers among women, followed by colon, rectal and blood cancer. Lung cancer is most commonly diagnosed in males, followed by colon, rectal and prostate cancer.