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Wednesday May 08, 2024

KP govt releases Rs70m for purchase of cancer medicine

By Mushtaq Yusufzai
January 01, 2016

Decides to continue providing funds for free treatment of patients in province

PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government has principally decided to continue providing funds for free treatment of cancer patients in the province and announced to release Rs70 million for immediate purchase of cancer drugs.

Also, Chief Minister Pervez Khattak while appreciating the project of providing free drugs to the cancer patients and upholding transparency in purchase of medicines has decided to continue the project and allocate more funds in the Annual Development Programme (ADP) with a handsome increase every year in its budget.

Senior officials of the provincial Health Department told The News that the decision to allocate funds for the project was made during a high-level meeting held here with Chief Minister Pervez Khattak in the chair.

Besides others, Prof Dr Abid Jameel, head of Medical Oncology department of Hayatabad Medical Complex (HMC) and Sahibzada Mohammad Saeed, chairman BoG of HMC, also attended the meeting.

“The government is committed to provide all out facilities to cancer patients of the province and in this regard funds will be issued soon to HMC to continue free cancer treatment for the patients,” a senior official said. 

He said Pervez Khattak directed the concerned authorities to release funds for free cancer treatment at the earliest and without any interruption.

“The chief minister also directed the authorities to submit PC-I for the first ever Hospice for terminal cancer patients at Hayatabad Medical Complex. Both the construction of Hospice as well as free cancer treatment will start very soon benefiting all the cancer patients of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa,” said the official. 

According to sources, during during Monitoring and Evaluation of the project, it has been declared transparent.   

At the moment, the government agreed to release Rs70 million for immediate purchase of cancer drugs for the coming four months.

Keeping in view unprecedented rise in cancer patients in the province and its adjoining tribal areas due to a number of reasons and primarily because of excessive use of explosives, the government has decided to increase funds with the passage of time.

It decided to release Rs300 million for 2016-17 and agreed to increase it up to Rs380 million in 2017-18.

In 2018-19, funds for free cancer drugs would be increased up to Rs470 million. Also, the project nomenclature has already been changed from Begum Nusrat Bhutto Oncology Services to Project for Access to Cancer Treatment (PACT).

It was apparently one of the reasons that the Pakistan Tehreek-I-Insaf-led government had stopped providing funds for the project as it was named after late leader of the Pakistan People’s Party Begum Nusrat Bhutto.

The previous ANP-PPP government if had done one thing good in health it was initiating this innovative project for helping the poor cancer patients in their treatment.

The government and drug manufacturer, Novartis signed an agreement under “public-private partnership” in 2011.

Under the agreement, the government was supposed to purchases two months of treatment for the first three years while Novartis agreed to afford the rest of 10 months treatment free of cost to the patients. 

Prof Dr Abid Jameel was appointed the focal person of the project and HMC was declared as focal point, where all cancer patients of the province were supposed to get free medicine since 2011.

Following positive evaluation report and successful completion of Phase-I of the project, the government expanded it to Phase-II for additional 445 patients.

The sources said that phase-III of the project has already been prepared in which free medicines for patients suffering from breast cancer, kidney cancer and all other forms of the deadly disease had been included.

When reached on telephone, Prof Dr Abid Jameel said they had enrolled 2000 cancer patients in the province and are being provided free cancer drugs.

They include 1320 patients suffering from Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia (CML) and 650 are those suffering from other types of cancer.

Health experts said that cancer treatment is extremely expensive and out of reach of most of the patients in Pakistan.

In Pakistan, most of cancer patients belong to young age group. It is feared that a large number of young patients will lose their lives if not properly treated as international standards.

According to experts, the cost of one cancer patient is Rs1.4 million to Rs3.6 million.