Daily Mail

NHS urges patients: Help us to help you

Don’t ignore warning signs of cancer, Britons told in ad campaign

- By Sophie Borland Health Correspond­ent

PATIENTS will be urged not to ignore cancer warning signs as part of a major campaign to avoid thousands of non-Covid deaths.

With a new surge in virus cases and another lockdown imminent, NHS bosses fear people will not alert their GP to ‘red flag’ tumour symptoms.

They are also concerned that patients will shun vital screening checks for breast, cervical and bowel cancers.

Cancer referrals plunged by up to 75 per cent as thousands avoided local surgeries during the lockdown and officials are anxious to avoid a repeat.

Professor Peter Johnson, NHS national clinical director of cancer, said: ‘The British public are very stoical and they don’t like to be any trouble.’

Older patients were especially protective of the NHS and might avoid seeking help despite the fact that over-65s make up two thirds of new cancer cases each year, he added.

NHS England will next week launch a major public awareness campaign urging patients to ‘help us, help you’, by not ignoring possible cancers.

TV, radio and social media adverts will tell people to get help for symptoms such as breast lumps, sudden weight loss, a cough or unusual pains, and to continue attending screening checks.

Professor Johnson stressed: ‘The risk of a cancer that you don’t pay attention to is much greater than the risk of coronaviru­s.

‘It’s incredibly important that people do come forward because otherwise we are going to see people with cancer that’s become more advanced.

‘Coronaviru­s is yet another reason not to trouble the NHS. But we really do want them to come forward. People should see their GP, people should go for their screening appointmen­ts.’

Figures uncovered by the Mail last month showed that hospital admissions for seven major conditions, including heart attacks, strokes and cancer, plunged by 173,000 between March and June.

And this week the charity Breast Cancer Now revealed that almost a million women had missed out on mammograms when screening programmes were paused.

Most have since resumed, but officials say some patients are ignoring their invitation letters because they are worried about catching the virus in hospital.

Professor Johnson added: ‘ We saw a downturn in the numbers of people coming forward when the coronaviru­s was very prevalent. It was clear that although the numcome bers coming forward has come back up, there are still more people. We want make sure to reach those parts of the population who may be a little bit reluctant to forward – older people, people in less well-off areas, people in black and ethnic minorities.’

About 165,000 UK patients die from cancer every year, equivalent to 450 a day and much more than the coronaviru­s total, which currently stands at just over 42,000.

Sarah Woolnough of Cancer Research UK said: ‘This message is really important. People should feel reassured that it’s safe to use our health services as we approach a second wave.’

Meanwhile, ministers were yesterday urged to make sure normal NHS services do not shut down again if Covid cases keep rising. A damning report from 160 health and care charities says patients suffered ‘substantia­l harm and distress’ during the first wave. It is based on the experience of 66,600 long-term patients.

The warning comes as some NHS regions start to divide hospitals into Covid and non-Covid.

■ BORIS Johnson yesterday unveiled the ‘ biggest hospital building programme in a generation’ with a list of 40 new facilities to be built by 2030 at a cost of £3.7billion. They include a new hospital on a former steel works site in Consett, County Durham, and a cancer hospital in Bath.

‘It’s safe to use our health services’

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