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11/8/2018 Breast cancer: In South Africa, mastectomies have an agonizing wait.

One surgeon is changing that - CNN

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Getting a mastectomy can be an agonizing wait in


South Africa. One surgeon is changing that
By Nosmot Gbadamosi, CNN

Updated 1635 GMT (0035 HKT) November 8, 2018

(CNN) — Before Anne Borg was finally diagnosed with breast cancer, she woke up early every week to be first in
line by 6 a.m. for a medical consultation at a government-run hospital in Cape Town, South Africa.

Although the hospital wasn't far, it was a long wait at the overcrowded clinic full of other medically uninsured South
Africans.

"I don't have medical insurance, and so I couldn't a ord everything that was going on. All the tests needed. You
can get them quicker if you do it privately," Borg explained. "At the public hospital, there are always between 20 to
30 people waiting ahead of you."

It took six months to get a diagnosis, and by that time, she needed surgery.

Thankfully, the 74-year-old recalls, a friend had advised her to ask about a project run by surgeons that help breast
cancer patients get their surgery quicker on the public health system: Project Flamingo.

Within two weeks, Borg was scheduled for surgery. She had a double mastectomy in September, 2018.

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Dr Liana Roodt operating on a patient and assisted by Dr Michael Brombacher.

"They saw that the [surgery] list was too long, so they formed Project Flamingo," Borg said. "They gave up their
own time on a Saturday to do these operations."

Breast cancer is often detected at a late stage, with one study finding that the time to diagnosis in Cape Town was
on average 8½ months. Waiting times for a mastectomy after diagnosis can be up to four months in South Africa.

Project Flamingo, founded by surgeon Dr. Liana Roodt, aimed to fix this after Roodt routinely experienced this in
her clinic at Groote Schuur, a state-funded teaching hospital in Cape Town.

Borg, who also went through cervical cancer when she was 31, now volunteers at the charity to make sure women
don't experience the same challenges she did in getting treatment early.

An agonizing wait
For eight years, Roodt has been dedicating her free time and recruiting other surgical volunteers and nurses to get
a backlog of vital life-saving surgery scheduled -- for free.

"So many operations need to be done quickly," Roodt said. "But people were waiting three or four months after
diagnosis before they could actually get their surgery done."

Many operating rooms across the country were empty on weekends and public holidays, so in 2010, Roodt started
raising funds to schedule and pay for the necessary facilities and nurses on those days.

"I just wrote an email to everybody in my email inbox," she recalled, confessing that she didn't know how to
proceed at the beginning.

A few survivors of breast cancer responded right away, and some of her colleagues o ered to help kick-start her
vision by volunteering their own free time to perform surgeries. Roodt admitted that it took "quite a few years to
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gain momentum."

Related Video: Breast cancer: Know the


facts 01:19

500 free surgeries


Getting the right permissions and regulations in place took an astonishing three years, Roodt said.

Even so, more than 500 women have benefited from mastectomies after Roodt and other surgeons began
devoting their time freely.

Her "catchup" surgeries reduced the backlog at Groote Schuur from a 12-week wait to between two and four
weeks.

The project has spread to nearby Tygerberg hospital, another public health institute in Parow, Cape Town, where
Borg had her surgery.

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Theatre sisters (nurses) on a break between surgeries.

Thanks to Roodt's determination, Project Flamingo has managed to recruit about 10 regular surgical professionals,
10 anesthetists and 10 volunteers who make up 15 sta members devoting their time to each hospital.

"We've had enough people willing to donate their time. ... Finding nursing time is a challenge, so we pay nursing
sta ," Roodt said.

To make the process fair, Roodt and her team do not select the patients to benefit; instead, they're chosen from
those already on the hospitals' systems.

"At least six to 15 surgeries are performed a month," Roodt said. "Some of the patients have paid a small fee
depending on their income. This is in agreement with the billing policy of the Department of Health to cover their
hospital admission. We take care of the expensive part: the surgery."

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Lack of options
A recent report from a group of surgeons in South Africa suggested that the number of specialist breast centers
nationwide needs to be increased to cope with demand.

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"The standard we are saying is that you should not wait more than 30 days between going to see a doctor and
getting a [breast cancer] diagnosis and we think that is possible," said Dr. Sarah Rayne, a surgeon and co-author
of the 2017 report.

"Even in Johannesburg, where you have one of the best centers with the best outcomes, they fail to reach that
target more than 60% of the time."

Rayne says the problem goes beyond timely operations.

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"More than 87% of our [South African] patients require chemotherapy. It means that by operating alone you won't
cure that person of cancer. Chemotherapy is only available in five or six centers in the whole country," Rayne said.

Radiation equipment is also scarce. "I think in the whole of Africa, more than half of [radiotherapy machines] are in
South Africa," Rayne said.

In reality, of the 131 radiotherapy units in sub-Saharan Africa, 75 are confined to South Africa, followed by Egypt,
according to the International Atomic Energy Agency.

There are more machines in the US than the whole of Africa based on the data collected. The US had 3,470
services.

The other challenge is the health system itself.

"In South Africa, more than 65% of the population exist on less than 1,000 rand ($72) a month," Rayne said.

"Only 13% have private health care. Meanwhile, 70% of the doctors in South Africa only work in the private health
system."

The problem is amplified in rural areas. "The health clinic may not be sta ed very well because the specialists don't
live in that area."

"Doctors have left the provincial hospitals because there's persistent prolonged shortages of sta caused by
austerity measures put in place by the provincial government," Mvuyisi Mzukwa, a chairman for the KwaZulu-Natal
coastal branch of the South African Medical Association, told CNN in an earlier interview.

But this is not a problem that's unique to South Africa. It's echoed across the continent.

Dr Liana Roodt in-between surgeries.

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Doctors going overseas


South Africa has about six surgeons per 100,000 people. The ratio in the United States is 36.

This is a problem reflected on a larger scale elsewhere across Africa. Nigeria, despite having overtaken South
Africa as the continent's largest economy, has just one trained surgeon per 100,000 people.

A 2018 report by NOIPolls, a local polling company and advocacy group Nigeria Health Watch, noted that there
were 72,000 nationally registered Nigerian doctors, according to the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria, but
only 35,000 practice in the country.

Many doctors have emigrated to practice in the UK and US, the report notes.

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In Ghana, Dr. Verna Vanderpuye, a consultant clinical oncologist at Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, says it is hard to
find the competency. "The quality of cancer surgeries is also very important," she said, suggesting that surgical
skills are limited in rural areas.

Both Rayne and Vanderpuye admit that persuading patients to have a mastectomy is also di cult.

"For young women, there's the fact that when they have a mastectomy, they only have one breast, and some, they
lose their spouses and their position in the society," Vanderpuye said.

In a 2018 study, she found that a fear of mastectomy was the primary reason Ghanaian women present with
advance stages of the disease.

Fear of treatment and not being able to access clinics in rural areas were also why many women in South Africa
presented with advanced breast cancer.

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Amy MacFarlane, a final year medical student closes a wound after operation.

Feeling like a woman


"In an ideal setting, psychological support, counseling and even practical things like bereavement counseling are
super important but seen as a luxury right now," Roodt said.

In South Africa, Project Flamingo started distributing pampering packs to patients that included bathroom
essentials, magazines and beauty treats, all for free.

So far, 4,500 packs have been given away by Roodt and her colleagues and friends.

"We were trying to show that even though being in hospital can be a daunting experience and you see us running
around the wards, we actually do care. ... This diagnosis does not mean you lose your feminist spirit, even though it
feels like it," Roodt said.

They can still feel like a woman despite what they are going through, she adds.

Michelle Rennie survived breast cancer 18 years ago, at the age of 46, and is now a director for Project Flamingo,
sourcing products for the pamper packs.

"These pamper packs have helped to build a community," Rennie said.

"We give them to each newly diagnosed woman," she added.

To combat the loneliness that many cancer patients experience, the project also connects survivors like Borg and
Rennie with new patients who o er mentorship and support throughout treatment.

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Project Flamingo theater nurses on a break.

For Borg, this kind of relationship building is important. "Only if


you have been through this can you understand what these
Follow CNN Africa on social people are doing," Borg said. "I had a wonderful husband that
went with me every day and sat with me every day, but there
media
was a woman next to me with no one."

See more stories on African Voices and Although Roodt has now joined private practice, she still
share your thoughts with us on Facebook, devotes her unpaid time to the project, seeing patients at
Twitter and Instagram Groote Shuur.

She has expand the project to cover other cancers and


complications from cancer, such as colorectal cancer.

"Many [colorectal cancer patients] develop stomas and have to


walk around with a poo bag attached onto their stomachs. But some of those stomas can be reversed after a
period of time," she said.

"Imagine having a poo bag attached for two to five years and dealing with a stoma when you are living in a shack
with no electricity and no running water," Roodt said. "It's a complete nightmare. It's not good enough to just take
care of the cancer but the quality of life is terrible."

"There is a part of me that is hopeful of there not being a need for Project Flamingo," she said. "For a health-care
system that is equal and fairer."

That is a "pipe dream" for now, she realizes, and so the project will continue to run for as long as it is needed.

Graphics by Sarah-Grace Mankarious and Gabrielle Smith

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