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MYANMAR

This selection of images features patients and their families being treated at Yangon Children’s Hospital (YCH) in Yangon, Myanmar.

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YCH is the main pediatric oncology facility in Myanmar. And for a country with a population of 53 million — 25% of which are under twenty-five years old — it means the unit operates a 100% occupancy level and is frequently over capacity; in 2015, they saw 286 new cases alone. As Myanmar emerges from decades of rule by an oppressive regime, many of the challenges for the country’s population are reflected in the challenges seen in these patients: access to transportation is difficult for those living outside the nation's capital, there is widespread poverty and significant malnutrition issues for the patient’s at YCH Oncology Unit. This makes treating patients with cancer even more difficult, as many patients abandon treatment part way through because of these and other socio economic issues.

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The global cancer burden is set to increase, and the number of people of all ages living with cancer worldwide is expected to rise from 12.7 million in 2008 to an estimated 22.2 million by 2030. And 90% of this anticipated increase will be from people living in LMICs.   With this escalation on the horizon it will be critical to look at institutions within LMICs, like Yangon Children’s Hospital, that have had success in increasing survival rates.

How I Live is a collaboration between The Dana Farber / Children's Hospital Global Health Initiative (GHI) and Persistent Productions.

Persistent Productions expresses gratitude for the support and assistance of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Inc. in the making of this film. 

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