BEIRUT — Throughout Beirut and other regions, adults and children struggle for survival in a country crippled by poverty and debts, who share one thing in common — their fight against illness and a struggle to stay alive.

“It’s mentally, morally and physically exhausting,” is how breast cancer patient Rima Khodr described her days to Al-Monitor. “Cancer can be treated, but the economic collapse in Lebanon is turning it into a death sentence.”

Most Lebanese diagnosed with cancer cannot afford to start treatment or get their hands on medicine that are imported and sold at high prices.

Khodr said that she skipped her last two chemotherapy sessions, as she was unable to cover the costs. Her health insurance, which is fully covered by the Ministry of Health as her husband is a lieutenant in the army, has been denying her requests for a discounted treatment rate.

It is not just cancer patients who are suffering; it has almost become an impossible mission to find aspirin in Lebanon.

“I want to speak on behalf of all diabetic patients. This is simply genocide against us; they’re indirectly ending our lives. Medicine is either available but we cannot afford it, or it is unavailable altogether,” said Lama Eid, a 32-year-old patient with diabetes and mother of three from Beirut.

According to Eid, Lebanon’s multi-crisis has affected her mental health and her treatment, which in turn has worsened her diabetes and increased her blood sugar levels.

The rising cost of medicine in Lebanon has forced her to skip certain medications and treatments several times.