Abstract
Primary liver cancer, particularly hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), remains a major killer in sub-Saharan Africa. In this dreadful landscape, West and Central Africas are more particularly affected. However, a small country located on the equator, Gabon, is apparently not concerned by this adverse situation. Despite worrying prevalences of many bona fide risk factors of HCC, including high rates of chronic infections with hepatitis viruses and very high alcohol consumption, Gabon presents theoretically an amazingly low incidence of HCC when compared to other countries of the region. Reports from many places in the world have emphasized the widespread underreporting of HCC cases presumably attributable to the difficulties of proper diagnosis or to a lack of local cancer registry. In Gabon, the remarkably vivid tradition of religious initiation called Bwiti includes some therapeutic rituals exerted by healers or Ngangas. Those treatments are particularly popular in case of severe diseases generally associated with a supernatural etiology. In the present paper, we hypothesize that, in Gabon, the remarkably low incidence of HCC is primarily due to the diversion of patients from the modern medical system due to their preference for Ngangas. Promotion of a form of medical syncretism respecting both systems might be an efficient policy to increase the attractiveness of modern medicine and to ultimately promote public health in Gabon.
Highlights
Other risk factors of chronic liver diseases are significantly prevalent in Gabon
Very few qualitative studies have been hitherto conducted in Sub Saharan Africa (SSA).[10]
The role played by aflatoxin B1, another major toxic risk factor of primary liver cancer (PLC), is totally undocumented in the country.[11,12]
Summary
Other risk factors of chronic liver diseases are significantly prevalent in Gabon. And in contrast with all neighboring countries, the epidemiology of primary liver cancer (PLC) in Gabon is currently not considered as a worrying Public Health problem.
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