Long term legacy of cancer treatment is unveiled in new study
Cancer rates are increasing at such a rate that research shows 42% of people who die in this country will have had a cancer diagnosis. And for most of them (64%), it is cancer which causes their death. [1]
The number of people living with cancer has also increased in the UK by 35% in the last ten years from 1.5 to two million in 2008. [2] This is because more people are getting cancer, and as treatment improves, people are surviving longer with cancer.
But whilst people are certainly living longer than ever with cancer; they are not necessarily living well.
New data from a Macmillan Cancer Support study, which aims to map the cancer patient’s journey by looking at patients’ hospital activity, shows many have ongoing, long term health problems.
The study shows that of those colorectal cancer patients still alive between five and seven years after their diagnosis: [3]
Ciarán Devane, Chief Executive of Macmillan Cancer Support, says:
“It is really alarming that the number of people who will get cancer is now well past one in three, and that there are so many more people with cancer today than even ten years ago.
“Our new data also shows – in more detail than we’ve ever had before - that cancer patients are experiencing issues which require support several years after initial diagnosis and treatment. The NHS really needs to recognise cancer’s long term impact on people’s lives, to plan better services and to develop more personalised care. We need services which keep people well and at home, not services which sort the problem when people arrive at A&E.
“There are currently two million people living with cancer in the UK and that number is doubling to four million over the next twenty years. [5] Yet no one thinks the country can afford to double its spending on cancer. We’ve therefore got to become twice as effective in how we spend that money.
“We have a massive challenge ahead if we are to keep up with the relentless toll cancer takes on people’s health, and the NHS must rise to it.”
References:
Source: Macmillan Cancer Support
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