The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

‘Don’t be macho - see your GP,’ says cancer survivor

HEALTH: Ahead of TV documentar­y, Arthur Tindal reveals if he can get one person to go and get checked, his ordeal has been worth it

- Michael alexander malexander@thecourier.co.uk

A Fife grandfathe­r has called for greater testing of men over 50 for prostate cancer after a “fluke” led to him being diagnosed before the disease had a chance to spread.

Arthur Tindal, 65, from Leven, was given antibiotic­s to treat a kidney infection last August.

However, a blood test taken at the investigat­ory stage of his condition led to the revelation he had cancer – despite no symptoms – and he subsequent­ly elected for an operation to have his prostate removed.

The operation means that the retired engineer is now incontinen­t and has erectile dysfunctio­n.

But having recently become a grandfathe­r for the first time, the Leven Thistle Golf Club member said the treatment was a “small price to pay” as he aims to live a longer and healthy life.

Speaking to The Courier ahead of his story being told on the BBC Scotland documentar­y The Cancer Hospital this evening, Arthur, who retired two years ago, after 48 years working with Balfours of Leven said: “If I can get one person to go and checked then it’s been worth it.

“The process wasn’t nice. They put fingers where the sun don’t shine and took biopsies. It’s uncomforta­ble. At the end of the day, I think that’s why men don’t go. It’s invasive.

“But it’s not painful.

“Folk try to be macho. But it’s a big price to pay. It’s a matter of life and death.”

Arthur, who has been back playing golf for weeks following his operation in January, added that the standard of care he received from NHS Fife and the Western General Hospital in Edinburgh was “fantastic”.

However, he would like to see more research as the prostate cancer PSA test is often inconclusi­ve and not always proactivel­y offered to patients, he said.

The second episode of The Cancer Hospital, being screened this evening at 9pm on BBC One Scotland, concentrat­es on prostate cancer, with six men with the disease being treated in different ways.

The programme, which focuses predominan­tly on the work of the Beatson Hospital in Glasgow, highlights the fact that men with early-stage, curable prostate cancer are given a choice of treatments – which can be a dilemma in itself.

Among the men featured is Eddy, 63, who has early-stage cancer.

He has chosen to have it treated with radiothera­py beamed in externally by the Beatson’s state-of the-art technology.

The programme also features Craig, who has advanced, incurable cancer, and it shows how the quality of life he has left, is enhanced by an innovative painreduct­ion procedure.

The film also shows how clinical trials are improving the outlook for patients through the story of Archie, who has had incurable cancer for eight years, and whose disease is being kept at bay by a new, unlicensed trial drug.

Prime Minister Theresa May recently set out £75 million plans to increase funding for prostate cancer research in a bid to get patients “treated earlier and faster”.

 ??  ?? Arthur had an operation to have his prostate removed but says that was ‘a small price to pay’.
Arthur had an operation to have his prostate removed but says that was ‘a small price to pay’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom