Yorkshire Post

Cancer can’t be case of collateral damage

- Imran Ahmad Khan Imrad Ahmad Khan is Tory MP for Wakefield and spoke in a parliament­ary debate on breast cancer diagnosis – this is an edited version.

THE lockdown order and the ensuing restrictio­ns that we presently endure have had a seismic impact on the services that the NHS can provide, including, crucially, cancer services.

NHS figures show a 60 per cent drop in urgent cancer referrals from the initial days of the March lockdown, compared with the same time last year.

Breast Cancer Now has raised concerns that almost one million women in the UK have missed NHS breast cancer screenings as a direct consequenc­e of the pandemic, because they were paused during the first lockdown before being gradually resumed.

Mammograms have the potential to detect cancer in its early stages and, ultimately, to save lives.

Treatment for those with other cancers has been significan­tly disrupted. The national guidelines may well have stated that urgent and essential cancer treatment must continue, but that has not been the case in every hospital.

Not everyone who has required urgent surgery has been able to access it, whether because of a lack of intensive care units or because it is too great a risk to patient or staff.

Similarly, those who have required major surgery have not always been fortunate enough to receive it.

That, again, has been a consequenc­e of a lack of recovery beds with ventilatio­n or of there being no ICU beds, if the surgery encountere­d complicati­ons, or because the surgery was simply too risky.

Aftercare – whether palliative care or chemothera­py – has also been disrupted by the lockdown.

The reality of those delays not only puts women under a great deal of stress and anxiety, but risks making the cancers diagnosed harder to treat if they are caught at later stages.

I truly understand that pain: an inordinate number of my family members have suffered from cancer.

Those who suffer from breast cancer should not be collateral damage in the battle against Covid.

Worryingly, that has been the case for virtually all forms of cancer treatment. The Health Data Research hub for cancer has warned that, as a result of the pandemic, there could be an additional 18,000 deaths of people with cancer.

In Wakefield, the Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust has been proactive in its attempts to ensure that cancer diagnoses occur and cancer patients are treated.

Prior to the pandemic, cancer was sadly already the biggest single cause of early death in the district. Breast cancer was the second most prevalent form, with about 250 new cases diagnosed each year.

In May, Pontefract Hospital was temporaril­y developed into a dedicated cancer centre to care for the people of Wakefield and North Kirklees who need diagnosis for surgery and suspected cancer during the Covid- 19 outbreak.

Here, however, while I concur with the chief executive of the NHS trust, Martin Barkley, that we are “fortunate that we have excellent modern facilities at Pontefract Hospital”, which is relatively close to Wakefield, having to travel significan­tly further afield will likely be a behavioura­l impediment on attendance for constituen­ts scheduled for diagnosis and treatment.

That adds to the existing fear about patients entering hospitals, evidenced by Abdul Mustafa, GP lead for cancer care at NHS Wakefield CCG, who said: “Clinicians working in cancer services know that patients are choosing not to have time- critical cancer treatment because of fear of exposure.”

In closing, I simply say that we must ensure that, however well meaning the policies, the antidote does not become worse than the disease we seek to cure.

As a result of the pandemic, there could be an additional 18,000 deaths of people with cancer.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom