“It is a project that we want to develop quickly, with a
very short-term financial return and will be extremely advantageous to treat
patients locally, translating into an advance for the Algarve, even before the
new Central Hospital [of the Algarve] is built”, said Horácio Guerreiro.
The lack of facilities for oncological diagnoses and
treatments in the region has forced patients to move to clinics and hospitals
outside the Algarve, namely to Spain.
Treatment in Spain
“The region does not have the necessary equipment to perform
certain types of treatments, which forces patients to leave the region, usually
to Lisbon, sometimes to Coimbra, Huelva and Seville, in Spain”, he noted.
According to Horácio Guerreiro, the fact that the public
criticized the fact that patients were being sent for treatments in Seville, to
the detriment of the Algarve, “only results from the real lack of knowledge of
the situation”.
This measure, he explained, is the result of an
international public tender for radiosurgery treatments, to which two companies
competed, one Portuguese and the other Spanish.
“The service was awarded to the Spanish company, renowned in
the clinical area and which presented guarantees of medical quality at a lower
price than the other competitor”, he advanced.
Patients who travel to Seville are provided with ambulance
transport by the company and “they are treated in a hospital environment, with
excellent inpatient and intensive care, if needed”, unlike the Faro clinic,
“which is an outpatient clinic and, if there is a problem, they have to be
transferred to the hospital”.
In the opinion of the clinical director of CHUA, the
distance of about 200 kilometres between Faro and Seville, “is not a problem
for patients, as their condition is assessed in advance”.
“We want excellence in the care of our patients, that is our
main concern, and we also believe that the radiotherapy treatment that is
carried out in the Algarve is also excellent”, he highlighted.
Facilities for the
Algarve
Horácio Guerreiro recalled that there are other exams that
are carried out outside the Algarve, namely, PET-TAC and some resonances,
“because the region does not have the capacity to perform them, whether for
patients with cancer or not”.
Hence, he argues, for the need to create a cancer centre in
the Algarve, equipped with state-of-the-art advanced equipment for this type of
disease and “with the highest levels of quality”.
“We are waiting for the transfer of land by Loulé Council,
with the Cancer Centre to be located on the edge of the municipalities of Faro
and Loulé, in the area planned for the new central hospital unit”, he
concluded.
A cancer center in the Algarve is absolutely essential. for so many reasons; not least of which being that without the appropriate facilities locally, people are forced to be away from home for procedures, treatments, and follow up. My mother, who passed away from cancer in 2008, had to undergo surgery in Lisbon, and as a family we had to take turns to go up and visit her. Afterwards, her aftercare was handled back in the Algarve, but also required return visits to Lisbon. When she eventually became terminally ill, in spite of additional surgery and radiotherapy, there was no hospice care in the South. She would have had to go to Lisbon, but we made do with a daily visit from a nurse, and we as a family took care of her, which was all we could do under the circumstances. No one should have to endure end-stage disease without dedicated hospice. No one.
By Tina Steele from USA on 29 Oct 2022, 05:49