The illness: breast
cancer; Cause of death: the occupation
3 March 2005
By Akiva Eldar
Haaretz
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/547286.html
Fatma Barghout was
only 26 when in April 2003 she discovered a suspicious lump in her breast.
The accountancy student from Gaza immediately went to see a surgeon at the
Shifa Hospital in Gaza. After he examined the X-ray and the biopsy, the
doctor told Fatma that it was a benign tumor. However, the tumor continued
to grow.

In June Fatma went to the surgeon's private clinic and asked him to remove
the lump, even if it was not malignant. A laboratory test at the hospital
again showed that the growth was benign. She was pregnant, and the doctor
promised that after she gave birth, everything would be fine.
In August Fatma went to the private clinic of the head of the oncology
department at Shifa Hospital. The tumor was already quite large and she
felt additional lumps in her armpit. The doctor prescribed an antibiotic.
At the next visit he suggested that she change her bra. Fatma went back to
the first surgeon. This time the findings of the biopsy were clear: a
malignant carcinoma.
One-hundred-and-forty-six days after she discovered the lump in her
breast, Fatma began chemotherapy treatments at Shifa Hospital. After nine
cycles of treatment she sent a biopsy to the Sheba Medical Center at Tel
Hashomer. The examination showed that the patient was in a critical phase,
and Fatma was summoned urgently to the oncology department.
Fatma's story is taken from a new report issued by Physicians for Human
Rights-Israel (PHRI) on the situation of cancer patients in the
territories. Cancer patients' chances of survival depend crucially on
access to specialists and the availability of sophisticated medical
equipment. Support by family members and encouragement by friends are also
of inestimable importance.
Fatma Barghout came from Gaza, which is poor in doctors and medical
equipment. While she was being treated in Israel, she was left all alone
most of the time with the cruel disease. Almost all alone. Members of the
physicians' non-profit organization and the staff of the oncology
department at Sheba Medical Center spared no efforts to save her life.
However, they were unable to break down the walls of the bureaucracy of
the occupation.
November 2003. Three times, Fatma applied to the Civil Liaison Office in
Gaza with a request to obtain an entry permit to receive treatment in
Israel. Three times she got no answer, neither positive nor negative. On
November 31, 2003, she asked for the help of PHRI. With the help of a
member of its directorate, Professor Rafi Walden, she was given an
appointment for treatment on the 25th of the month. Fatma submitted
another application for an entry permit, and again received no answer.
December 2003. After it was contacted by PHRI, the State Prosecutor's
Office stated that Fatma would be allowed to enter Israel on December 7
for the purpose of receiving treatment at Tel Hashomer. Fatma began a
series of daily chemotherapy treatments at Sheba Medical Center, for a
period of two weeks. Her request for a permit for someone to accompany her
was rejected, and she came for the difficult treatments on her own, always
after an exhausting wait at the Erez crossing point.
February 2004. On February 9, 2004, Fatma was scheduled for surgery to
remove the breast tumor. As always, she came to the Erez crossing point,
alone, early in the morning. At 5:30 P.M. she was still waiting at the
crossing point, until the woman soldier who was dealing with the entry
permit finished her kitchen duty. At 6:30 in the evening Fatma went
through the crossing point. In the operation that was performed on the
following morning, the doctors found that the tumor had metastasized, and
they had to remove the entire breast as well as two lymph glands. This
time, too, Fatma was all alone - despite the doctors' request, the
security authorities did not allow family members to be at her side.
March 2004. At the end of March, after a week's delay because of
difficulties in obtaining a permit to enter Israel, Fatma began radiation
therapy at Tel Hashomer - the success of the treatments depends to a large
extent on their being given in succession, at least five times a week.
During that period the Erez crossing point was frequently closed, and
cancer patients missed many treatments. Another cancer patient from Gaza,
whom Fatma met in the waiting room before treatments, missed eight
treatments in a row. Physicians for Human Rights submitted to the Civil
Liaison Office requests for permits for the two women to stay in Israel
until the treatments were completed. The applications were refused until
the non-profit association, together with another NPO, One in Nine-Women
for Women with Breast Cancer, petitioned the High Court of Justice. Fatma
was given a permit for one month only and went to live in the home of
Maskit Bendel of PHRI in Tel Aviv. The doctors said that the treatment had
been successful. It seemed as though Fatma's life had been saved.
July 2004. However, a month later Fatma's condition began to deteriorate
rapidly. In July, she returned to Tel Hashomer in an ambulance, this time
accompanied by her mother (thanks to the intervention of the physicians'
association). The doctors discovered that the cancer had spread to her
spine and determined that she had to undergo another series of
chemotherapy treatments. Fatma was hospitalized for a series of painful
treatments and wanted to say good-bye to her family. Her father and two of
her sisters were allowed to join her mother, but the border control
authorities demanded a guarantee of NIS 30,000 for each of the members of
the family. Three weeks later, under a threat by the physicians'
association to petition the High Court of Justice and with the
intervention of Meretz MK Yossi Sarid, Fatma's sisters entered Israel. The
father remained in Gaza.
The devoted team at Tel Hashomer succeeded in stabilizing Fatma's
condition, and she was sent back to Gaza to continue chemotherapy, but the
Palestinian Health Ministry approved the expensive treatments only one
month later. During that time, her condition deteriorated until she found
it difficult to breathe and suffered from terrible pains. The doctor who
had been treating her in Israel ordered her to return urgently. The
permit, which this time was given at the last minute, did not include an
accompanying person and the coordination of her departure in an ambulance.
Fatma, who was no longer able to walk, remained at home. In the meantime,
because of the Rosh Hashanah holiday, the Jewish New Year, a complete
closure was imposed on the Gaza Strip that continued until Operation Days
of Atonement at the end of that month.
A delegation of doctors from the Physicians for Human Rights and One in
Nine went to the Civil Liaison Office. They were promised that Fatma and
her mother would be permitted to enter Israel. The next day Fatma and her
mother arrived at the Erez crossing point. After a long wait on the floor
(there are no benches or chairs at the crossing point), she was taken for
a security check. As her silicon breast "buzzed," the soldiers ordered
Fatma to strip off her outer dress. An officer who saw what was happening
scolded her for her behavior and sent her back to Gaza. The NPO was told
that Fatma and her mother had not passed the security check. A few days
later Fatma and her mother left in an ambulance in the direction of the
crossing point, along with six other patients, including two cancer
patients. Because of exchanges of fire in the area, the ambulance had to
turn around and go back. Fatma was admitted to Shifa Hospital in Gaza and
hooked up to a respirator. There were chemotherapy medications left over
from a patient who had died, enough to last for two days.
October 2004. On October 12, Fatma was told that she had to submit a
request for an exit permit through the Palestinian health coordinator. The
transfer was delayed for one day because the Palestinian coordinator was
stuck. The next day the fax at the Civil Liaison Office was out of order.
Finally the people from PHRI, with the help of colleagues in Gaza,
succeeded in obtaining the use of a Red Cross all-terrain vehicle, a kind
of ambulance, the only vehicle capable of driving on the ruined roads.
Fatma started chemotherapy at Tel Hashomer an entire month after the date
that had been set for her.
November 2004. Fatma died at home on November 24. The Barghout family
wanted to bury her in the new cemetery in Gaza, the only one where there
were burial plots available. Because of shooting by Israel Defense Forces
soldiers in the area, it was impossible to get near it. Fatma was buried
in the old Gaza cemetery. Her body was interred with the remains of two
other women.
"The death of Fatma Barghout will be a statistic in the next report of the
Palestinian Authority," wrote Maskit Bendel, who accompanied Fatma until
she died, and formulated the report. "This is the story of one of hundreds
of women whose stories are known by only a very few people."
Women suffering from cancer in Gaza face little chance of surviving
Sixty percent of all cases of breast cancer in Gaza are diagnosed at a
late stage, when the cancer has already spread. In Israel, this figure is
only 5 to 7 percent.
A bleak picture has emerged for the members of Physicians for Human
Rights-Israel who are researching the state of the health system in Gaza.
It is unable to cope adequately with the diagnosis and treatment of
cancer. For years, Israel has prevented Gaza Strip physicians from taking
specialized training at Israeli hospitals. Under closure, Palestinian
doctors from Gaza are prevented from leaving for specialized training and
further study and medical students cannot complete their studies at
universities in the West Bank and abroad.
The report, which is made public here for the first time, reveals that
medications are not arriving in the Gaza Strip with regularity and that
patients are not managing to get to medical treatments. Essential
equipment for the treatment of cancer, such as radiology equipment, does
not exist in Gaza because of Israel's opposition - Health Inforum says the
opposition stems from the use of radioactive materials in the treatment.
The survival rate (a measure of access to diagnostic services, the quality
of the diagnosis and the quality of the treatment) for breast cancer among
Jewish women in Israel is 70 to 75 percent, and for Arab women in Israel,
60 to 65 percent. These figures are steadily rising and the rate of women
who survive breast cancer in the world as a whole, particularly in
developed countries, is increasing. However, the breast cancer survival
rate for women from Gaza is extremely low - 30 to 40 percent, or even
less. According to Palestinian Health Ministry figures, 60 percent of the
women in Gaza who have been diagnosed with breast cancer were diagnosed
after the cancer had already spread in their bodies. Of them, 42.2 percent
were diagnosed after the cancer had spread to their lymph glands, and 17
percent were diagnosed after the cancer had spread to other areas of the
body. In Israel, only 5 to 7 percent of the women with breast cancer are
diagnosed after the cancer has spread to other organs. It is a reasonable
assumption that the late diagnosis has a significant effect on mortality.
Other factors influencing low survival rates in Gaza are the especially
virulent form of the disease and the young age at which it appears. In
addition, diagnosis opportunities and medical treatment are inadequate and
many patients do not succeed in leaving to obtain treatments not available
in the Gaza Strip. Patients who were sent for treatments in Israel arrived
at a relatively advanced stage of the illness, some of them after failed
treatment attempts that harmed the chances of recovery. |