Do you bleed during or after intercourse? Read this from Prof. Adewole

Nigeria’s Minister of Health Isaac Folorunso Adewole attends an emergency National Council on Health meeting on the control of Lassa Fever in Abuja

Prof. Isaac Adewole, former Nigerian Minister of Health

By Vivian Ihechu

Prof. Isaac Adewole, a former minister of health in Nigeria, says many people are unaware that contact bleeding especially during intercourse or just after sexual intercourse can be an early sign of cervical cancer.

Adewole, Co-Founder, African Cancer Coalition, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos on Thursday in a telephone interview that cervical cancer was preventable and treatable if presented and diagnosed early.

According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), cervical cancer is still the second most common cancer among women in Nigeria and the fourth most common cancer among women globally.

It is the most common among women ages 15-44 years, claiming 7,900 women’s lives each year from the 12,000 cases reported in Nigeria.

Adewole said: “The challenge in Nigeria, just like the challenge in Africa and many developing countries, is that a lot of people are largely unaware of the situation with cervical cancer.”

He said they present themselves at the hospital mainly in an advanced stage, already too late.

“One, they are not aware of the symptoms of early stages which include contact bleeding especially during intercourse or just after sexual intercourse.

“What most women with such incidents usually do is to stay away from their men believing that the man caused the bleeding.

“They probably thought it was due to trauma, and some form of injury. And interestingly, when they do that, the bleeding will stop but the disease will continue to progress.

“So, by the time they will have a resurgence of the disease in terms of symptoms, the disease will be far advanced,” he said.

Adewole, a Professor at the University of Ibadan and Northwestern University, said: “So, you have these women moving from one caregiver to the other and one healing home to another.

“By the time they finally present at the final destination, maybe a Teaching Hospital, or a private facility manned by a Specialist, the disease would be advanced, and at that stage, it is beyond cure.”

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The former minister of health said about 80 per cent of cases of cervical cancer presented were in advanced stages, and that many healthcare practitioners also missed some of these early signs/stages of cervical cancer.

Adewole quoted the WHO as saying the symptoms of early-stage cervical cancer might include: “Irregular blood spotting or light bleeding between periods in women of reproductive age.

“Postmenopausal spotting or bleeding, bleeding after sexual intercourse; and increased vaginal discharge, sometimes foul smelling.”

On the causes of cervical cancer, the WHO says, two Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) types (16 and 18) were responsible for nearly 50 per cent of high-grade cervical pre-cancers.

HPV is mainly transmitted through sexual contact and most people were infected with HPV shortly after the onset of sexual activity.

No fewer than 90 per cent of them cleared the infection eventually and Cervical cancer could be cured if diagnosed at an early stage and treated promptly.

Proffering some solutions, Adewole told NAN that new research on the efficacy of a one-dose HPV vaccine regimen was among several of the factors that could prevent and bring the world closer to eliminating cervical cancer.

He urged increased sensitisation on the disease by governments and stakeholders.

He encouraged the HPV vaccine to be given to young girls from ages nine to 14 to prevent them from having cancer.

He also advised women with symptoms to present early at health facilities for diagnosis.

Adewole is among the 12 leading health experts from around the world moving the powerful call to action in the fight against cervical cancer through The Global Declaration to Eliminate Cervical Cancer.

The declaration was formally launched at the World Health Assembly in Geneva on May 22, 2023, with signatures from more than 1200 global health leaders and advocates representing over 100 countries.

Top among them included former Prime Minister of New Zealand, Jacinda Ardern; CEO of Amref Health Africa, Githinji Gitahi; President of the International Federation of Obstetrics and Gynecology (FIGO), Jeanne Conry, and President-elect of the International Pediatric Association, Naveen Thacker.

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