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Sturgeon announces cancer care overhaul in bid to tackle rising rates of disease



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Published Date: 13 February 2008
CANCER care in Scotland is to be overhauled in a bid to tackle the increasing rates of the disease fuelled by an ageing population, it was announced yesterday.
Nicola Sturgeon, the health secretary, said that the Scottish Government would seek views from patients, carers, medics and charities before publishing a new strategy this summer.

The move – which will look at preventing cancer, helping suffer
ers with ancillary problems such as finances and abolishing inequalities of treatment – was welcomed by experts last night.

Latest figures show that almost 130,000 people are living with cancer in Scotland, and there are 27,000 new diagnoses every year.

Ms Sturgeon said: "The good news is we have made great strides in recent years. Investment in cancer services has delivered more staff, more state-of-the-art equipment.

"More people today are surviving cancer. But there is no room for complacency because more people over the next few years will be diagnosed with cancer and, as people get older, the likelihood is people with cancer will have other issues."

She said the consultation would "look ahead to where we want to go in terms of improvements to cancer care" and how to "up our game to improve prevention of cancer".

Ms Sturgeon added that some plans were already in place, with a cervical cancer vaccination being introduced later this year and a screening programme for bowel cancer being rolled out.

In November, it was revealed that 87.3 per cent of patients were being treated within 62 days of urgent referral – an improvement on previous figures but still below the 95 per cent target.

Ms Sturgeon said improving on this figure would also be a focus of the move, but the consultation would look at whether the length of wait should be brought down, or more cases brought within the target.

The consultation will also consider education initiatives to encourage lifestyle changes and build on the smoking ban.

Sheila Duffy, chief executive of the anti-smoking pressure group Ash Scotland, said there was "no doubt" that, with such measures, the country could "make great progress in the fight against cancer and improving Scotland's public health".

St John Hattersley, head of service for Macmillan Cancer Support in Scotland, said: "There does need to be a focus throughout the patient journey (on] people being informed about the full range of help and support material available to them and (to make sure] they are supported to make choices on what they need and want."

Richard Davidson, Cancer Research UK Scotland director of policy, added it was "incredibly important" to provide patients with "high-quality, tailored information" in the internet age.

ST JOHN HATTERSLEY
PUBLIC health authorities working with the public sector should take specific actions targeted at the hard-to-reach groups so that the whole equality agenda is given a specific thrust in cancer services.

We need to bring both health and local authorities' services together, and an example of that would be the work Macmillan has done on benefits and financial advice.

Patients taking a role in their own treatment and care is really a huge issue that's not going to be easily delivered.

It needs some national framework for patient and carer involvement. I think we need a mechanism for best practice across Scotland.

• St John Hattersley is head of service for Macmillan Cancer Support in Scotland, and chairman of the Cancer Coalition.

DR GRAHAME HOWARD
MORE patients are living longer with cancer and there's a huge increase in the cancer burden. It will require more people, more kit, more networks to look at those patients, and the interesting thing will be the balance of where people are looked after – the community, various drop-in centres. How many people can be looked after in the home?

It's also about engaging the patients and this is where the patient comes into the discussion. They will be focal to the debate. We are looking for optimal and improved care for the increased number of patients – and equality.

• Dr Grahame Howard is a consultant oncologist with NHS Lothian.

SHEILA DUFFY
A MASSIVE 89.5 per cent of all lung cancer deaths and 62.5 per cent of all upper "aerodigestive" cancer deaths in Scotland are due to tobacco. But by reducing smoking and taking positive steps on other lifestyle factors identified as causing cancer, we can take action to change.

By introducing effective measures to prevent young people from starting to smoke, and supporting smokers to quit through accessible cessation support and services, we can cut smoking rates and the appalling toll of cancer on the lives of those it affects. Scotland can make great progress in the fight against cancer if we establish measures needed to tackle smoking now.

• Sheila Duffy is the chief executive of Ash Scotland.

RICHARD DAVIDSON
ONE of the first things is prioritising cancer prevention. Scotland has done amazing things in recent years, leading the way in smoking in public places and what they're doing about age of sale, and we are hopeful they are going to take action on sunbeds too.

The other points about prevention are improving early presentation, detection and screening. That's where our rates are higher than the rest of Europe. We need to tackle that.

Scotland leads the way in many areas of cancer research and access to clinical trials, but we need to see the Scottish Government supporting that research and encouraging it. There also needs to be a concentrated effort to tackle inequalities.

• Richard Davidson is Cancer Research UK Scotland's director of policy.

From 'sore throat' to a second cancer battle
WHEN father of two Thomas Reid went to the doctor with a sore throat, he was told it was an infection.

He binged on paracetamol in a bid to numb the excruciating pain and ended up in hospital, having accidentally poisoned his liver with the drugs.

It was there he received the true diagnosis: throat cancer.

The 51-year-old, who had already battled bladder cancer, said: "I think three or four consultants were in the room when I went in and they examined me and saw the X-rays. Basically they went through a lot of medical stuff and at the end they asked if I wanted to ask anything and I just said: 'The main question is, am I going to survive?'

"They said, 'The good news is yes, we think you are totally curable', which is a huge weight off your shoulders, but you know it's going to be a hard road."

Mr Reid receives chemotherapy and radiotherapy and the initial side-effects, because of his damaged liver, were horrendous. He will lose his speech and has to be fed through a tube.

"I've got a teenage son and daughter so I wondered how I was going to look after them and myself," said Mr Reid, of Davidsons Mains, Edinburgh.

"My partner now looks after me. That's difficult because the council are trying to take benefits off me. I'm finding it hard to pay my rent at the moment.

"My daughter moved out and it's only my young son and we are trying to look after the dog. The dog's being neglected and I have got to do something about that.

"I have to stay with my carer, my partner, because I'm not meant to be on my own and she stays in a cottage with no stairs. I'm losing the power in my right leg. Home life is pretty hard."

He said he believed the Scottish Government consultation was "worthwhile" and should result in more funding and "appreciation" for the health service.

"We need more education," he said. "I'm a smoker but I'm on a no-smoking programme, which I find hard. It's something I never thought about."





The full article contains 1315 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 12 February 2008 11:57 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Cancer research
 
1

thinking,

Scotland 13/02/2008 08:53:42
Why not amalgamate all the Cancer research charities so that they work together instead of wasting time and resources duplicating research?
2

Mikey,

13/02/2008 08:55:05
Is Sheila Duffy a doctor now? 89.5% of lung cancer deaths in Scotland are due to smoking? I know that she's just a waffler, but, citation please?
3

Mcsnagpile,

13/02/2008 10:16:36
Doctors stated publicly in the 1960’s that there was no proven connection between smoking and lung cancer. How times change but memories linger.
Good books title the doctor, the sore throat, and the Paracetamol. It won’t cure your throat but it will feel a lot better when your liver packs in.

The patient is not curable without a change in life style. Will this happen, wait for another exciting episode. The fruit bowl manufacturers have all gone out of business in the mean time, unless it is ashtray size.
One thing about my USA doctor he would always take a blood sample to back up his diagnosis.
och bit wer auwfy buzi.
4

G,

dundee 13/02/2008 12:28:33
Mikey
What the point of giving you a reference?
You'll just ignore it or present some other research that supports your POV.
And #3 "some" doctors in the 60s said that there was no link and they were misinfromed or wrong or paid by big tobacco.
More recent research says different....
5

Mikey,

13/02/2008 12:33:50
OK, if that's the case, show me where it says that 89.5% of cancer deaths in Scotland are due to smoking. I've tried Google but can't find it anywhere!

BTW, I stopped smoking years ago but hate to hear this woman inventing facts to suit her arguement. She does it constantly. I've a feeling she may be a member of the Labour Parody!
6

Iain D,

Tunbridge Wells 13/02/2008 12:41:37
In 2002 Cancer Research Campaign and Imperial Cancer Research Fund, the two largest British cancer charities, merged creating the worlds largest Cancer Research Charity.
I too was diagnosed with throat cancer, though my vocal chords were saved. It took nearly three years of constant visits to the doctors to get a referal to a specialist and that was to a Cardiologist. He spotted the problem and took me to the ENT unit and I did not leave the hospital for two weeks.
As an aside I never smoked but the connection between smoking and cancer is well and truely proved now despite the smoke screen put up by the tobacco companies. A starting point for information is http://www.cancerbackup.org.uk/Aboutcancer/Causes/Dietlifestyle
7

TheTerminator,

13/02/2008 13:31:59
Something in this doesn't ring true.Nicola Sturgeon says cancer rates are rising and Sheila Duffy blames it all on smoking. What happened to the reductions the smoking ban was meant to instantaneously result in.Is the Smoking ban a complete waste of time and should it be scrubbed.
8

Duncan in Edinburgh,

13/02/2008 15:59:35
#5 She said 89.5% of *lung cancer* deaths. Stop misrepresenting.

#7 Nobody claimed it would have instantaneous results. Stop misrepresenting.
9

Amparo de Glasgow,

13/02/2008 17:03:57
Nahh ...
Garbagio ...!!
More cancer caused by nuclear power and nuvlear bomb ...

Hiroshima; Nagasaki; Xmas Island; Bikini Atoll; Windscle (Sellafield) Dounraey; Faslane; Coulport ... etc etc ...need I continue??

That's what these government eejits never talk about ehh??
10

Amparo de Glasgow,

13/02/2008 17:05:13
Such barefaced liars ... the SNP are just as involved in the manufactured lies these days too.
11

Amparo de Glasgow,

13/02/2008 17:12:09
Still comforting to know that Tony Blair
... commisioned more nuclear power plants
... and the Jessie Broon
... has no plans to stop / cancel them.

Wee Eck (wae yon styoooopit grin ye wid nivir tire of punching) ...
and ...
... "Stepford Wife" Nikki Sturgeon-bot Version 2.0001

... and John "C'mon Nick Clegg let me become a FibDem" Swinney


Same filthy hands as Jessie Broon ...

... No change there then ehhh??

Why do these politicos
... think the public are daft???

P45 the lot of them on Election Day ...
... Time Scotland had honesty !!!!!!!

 

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