The Chronicle

New hope on cancer

-

AT The Chronicle, news is at the heart of what we do. We live it – but we remain aware that some news can change lives.

Such as when somebody close to you is diagnosed with cancer.

You may recently have read stories calling for improvemen­ts in Britain's cancer survival rates.

Nobody would argue that we desperatel­y need those improvemen­ts or that we need them fast.

But it's also important to remember the progress our generation has seen in fighting this disease.

And to hear the good news stories from people whose lives have been saved by new research or who have benefited from innovative, kinder treatments.

That's why we have teamed up with Cancer Research UK for the next month to tell some of those stories in our pages and to delve more deeply into some of the good news there really is to read around cancer.

Because there is good news. And we'd like to share it with you. Thanks to Cancer Research UK, there is research happening right now – research which means more people will be getting more positive news about cancer in the future.

Of course there is still much work to be done to develop more effective treatments and better diagnostic tools.

There's lots more to discover about how we prevent cancer in the first place.

We also know that there are variations in survival rates between cancer types, however, let's keep in mind that more people than ever are alive today thanks to research.

Over the last 40 years, Cancer Research UK reports that overall cancer survival in the UK has doubled.

In the 1970s, one in four people survived their disease for 10 years or more. Today, it is two in four and improving.

The rate of improvemen­t in the survival rate means that an estimated 519,000 cancer deaths have been avoided in the UK between the 1980s and 2010. That's the type of good news really worth sharing with you.

In March, I am hoping to be celebratin­g a year free of cancer, and it’s also been 10 years since my wife and I met. Mark Lanagan

The cancer has gone. She’s an inspiratio­n to all of her friends, and especially to me. Vea Fernandes, mum of 15-year-old Alanya

I do gigs for Cancer Research UK. I’m certain my treatment wouldn’t have been possible without them at the research they fund. Keith Hubbard

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Darren Thwaites, Editor-in-chief, Trinity Mirror North East
Darren Thwaites, Editor-in-chief, Trinity Mirror North East

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom