Pediatric Oncology in Nigeria: A Panoramic View

PURPOSE: A large number of children still die as a result of cancer in low- to middle-income countries, and factors such has poor infrastructure, inadequate human resources, and poorly developed health insurance are responsible for most of these deaths. Nigeria is a country with a young population a...

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Main Authors: Adeseye Michael Akinsete, Babatunde Adeniran Odugbemi, Gbemisola Eniola Ogundowole, Uchechukwu Udochukwu Anene-Nzelu, Edamisan Temiye, Adebola Akinsulie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society of Clinical Oncology 2019-07-01
Series:Journal of Global Oncology
Online Access:http://ascopubs.org/doi/10.1200/JGO.18.00231
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spelling doaj-59ce6adb310644e688183528eafccf312020-11-25T03:58:19ZengAmerican Society of Clinical OncologyJournal of Global Oncology2378-95062019-07-0151710.1200/JGO.18.002311Pediatric Oncology in Nigeria: A Panoramic ViewAdeseye Michael Akinsete0Babatunde Adeniran Odugbemi1Gbemisola Eniola Ogundowole2Uchechukwu Udochukwu Anene-Nzelu3Edamisan Temiye4Adebola Akinsulie5University of Lagos College of Medicine, Lagos, NigeriaLagos State University College of Medicine, Lagos, NigeriaLagos University Teaching Hospital, Lagos, NigeriaLagos University Teaching Hospital, Lagos, NigeriaUniversity of Lagos College of Medicine, Lagos, NigeriaUniversity of Lagos College of Medicine, Lagos, NigeriaPURPOSE: A large number of children still die as a result of cancer in low- to middle-income countries, and factors such has poor infrastructure, inadequate human resources, and poorly developed health insurance are responsible for most of these deaths. Nigeria is a country with a young population and a struggling health system. We aimed to survey pediatric oncologists in Nigeria using an online survey instrument. METHODS: We surveyed the national group of pediatric oncologists using an instrument designed to assess manpower availability, infrastructural support, support services, and presence of radiotherapy and medications. RESULTS: A total of 14 institutions responded, represented by 24 oncologists of the 42 oncologists on the platform, with a response rate of 57.1%. Most of the oncologists had practiced for more than 10 years, but only two institutions had a dedicated pediatric oncology ward. There was no population-based pediatric oncology tumor registry. Molecular diagnostic capability was not available, nor was a structurally efficient radiotherapy support service. The centers also struggled with inadequate blood and blood product provision. CONCLUSION: Pediatric oncology services in Nigeria are still grappling with weak human capital, poorly developed infrastructure, weak regional and national referral systems, and poor support services.http://ascopubs.org/doi/10.1200/JGO.18.00231
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adeseye Michael Akinsete
Babatunde Adeniran Odugbemi
Gbemisola Eniola Ogundowole
Uchechukwu Udochukwu Anene-Nzelu
Edamisan Temiye
Adebola Akinsulie
spellingShingle Adeseye Michael Akinsete
Babatunde Adeniran Odugbemi
Gbemisola Eniola Ogundowole
Uchechukwu Udochukwu Anene-Nzelu
Edamisan Temiye
Adebola Akinsulie
Pediatric Oncology in Nigeria: A Panoramic View
Journal of Global Oncology
author_facet Adeseye Michael Akinsete
Babatunde Adeniran Odugbemi
Gbemisola Eniola Ogundowole
Uchechukwu Udochukwu Anene-Nzelu
Edamisan Temiye
Adebola Akinsulie
author_sort Adeseye Michael Akinsete
title Pediatric Oncology in Nigeria: A Panoramic View
title_short Pediatric Oncology in Nigeria: A Panoramic View
title_full Pediatric Oncology in Nigeria: A Panoramic View
title_fullStr Pediatric Oncology in Nigeria: A Panoramic View
title_full_unstemmed Pediatric Oncology in Nigeria: A Panoramic View
title_sort pediatric oncology in nigeria: a panoramic view
publisher American Society of Clinical Oncology
series Journal of Global Oncology
issn 2378-9506
publishDate 2019-07-01
description PURPOSE: A large number of children still die as a result of cancer in low- to middle-income countries, and factors such has poor infrastructure, inadequate human resources, and poorly developed health insurance are responsible for most of these deaths. Nigeria is a country with a young population and a struggling health system. We aimed to survey pediatric oncologists in Nigeria using an online survey instrument. METHODS: We surveyed the national group of pediatric oncologists using an instrument designed to assess manpower availability, infrastructural support, support services, and presence of radiotherapy and medications. RESULTS: A total of 14 institutions responded, represented by 24 oncologists of the 42 oncologists on the platform, with a response rate of 57.1%. Most of the oncologists had practiced for more than 10 years, but only two institutions had a dedicated pediatric oncology ward. There was no population-based pediatric oncology tumor registry. Molecular diagnostic capability was not available, nor was a structurally efficient radiotherapy support service. The centers also struggled with inadequate blood and blood product provision. CONCLUSION: Pediatric oncology services in Nigeria are still grappling with weak human capital, poorly developed infrastructure, weak regional and national referral systems, and poor support services.
url http://ascopubs.org/doi/10.1200/JGO.18.00231
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