Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Funding will help complete research project

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DUNDEE Rotary Club is providing vital funds to complete a medical research project aimed at saving lives through earlier detection of serious illnesses.

As part of a £100,000 windfall for good causes in and around the city to mark the club’s centenary year, £11,000 has gone to support a bowel screening campaign which has rolled out across the UK since its creation locally.

Project leader Professor Bob Steele said the population of Dundee would hugely benefit from the research because of the city’s high levels of multimorbi­dity – people affected by two or more chronic conditions.

His team at Dundee University is currently working on a significan­t developmen­t of the successful screening programme.

They need £11,000 to complete their work over the next 12 months and the Rotary Club has stepped up with the crucial funding.

The bowel cancer initiative has already saved thousands of lives of people over the age of 50.

The disease can affect one in 20 people, but is one of the most treatable forms of cancers if detected early through faecal haemoglobi­n – blood in stool samples.

Prof Steele’s team developed the screening programme to identify bowel cancer in its early stages and greatly increase chances of positive outcomes through early treatment.

“Scotland’s bowel screening programme is run from the Bowel Screening Centre in Dundee, making it the ideal location for the project,” said Prof Steele.

“The research team in Dundee is delighted to have this donation from the Rotary Club of Dundee, as it allows us to take this important research forward to a stage where it could have a significan­t clinical impact.”

Robert Dunn, chairman of the Rotary Club’s centenary committee and a former president, said: “We are delighted to support this very worthwhile medical research project with Professor Bob Steele and his team.”

LOCALS living in a quiet village have been left wondering if empty alcohol containers attached to trees are a protest or artistic expression.

A stretch of road near Westmuir in Angus has been transforme­d this week, with vodka bottles and beer cans dangling from trees.

A 100-yard stretch at Egnamoss Road hung with about 50 containers has been branded an eyesore by some locals.

Jim Miller, who has lived in the area for more than 30 years, said: “It’s certainly a strange phenomenon. There have been problems with

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