Mark Pawsey, MP for Rugby and Bulkington attended a Westminster reception hosted by the charity Beating Bowel Cancer to support better outcomes for bowel cancer patients. Mark joined other Members of Parliament, bowel cancer patients, and health professionals to hear about the charity’s plans to deliver significant improvements in bowel cancer survival rates in the UK, with the aim of saving 4000 lives during the next five years. Bowel cancer is the UK’s second biggest cancer killer, but this doesn’t have to be the case. If caught early enough over 90% of those diagnosed can survive more than five years, with that figure drops to just 7% if they are diagnosed at a late stage, so early diagnosis is vital for patient outcomes.
To find out more about bowel cancer please visit the charity’s website www.beatingbowelcancer.org or call their helpline on 08450 719 301.
Mark said:
“We all need to work to keep bowel cancer high on the agenda to ensure that the disease becomes a rare cancer killer rather than the second biggest cancer killer in the UK within the life of the next Government. If I am given the opportunity to be in parliament after the election I vow to do all I can to reduce bowel cancer deaths in Rugby and Bulkington.”
Mark Flannagan, Chief Executive of the charity Beating Bowel Cancer, said:
“NHS England has announced that it wants to save 8,000 deaths from cancer over the next five years. Today’s event enabled us to outline the key policy priorities that need to be achieved if we are to save at least 800 lives from bowel cancer per year during the life of the next Government. We also announced that Beating Bowel Cancer will publish its own Five Year Forward View to cover the term of the next Parliament and we want it to be a challenge to do better for bowel cancer patients. We’re very grateful to Mark Pawsey MP, for his interest in the issue and look forward to working with them in the future in order to improve outcomes for bowel cancer patients in Rugby and Bulkington.”
Mark concluded:
“Ensuring that patients get the help they need is vital and whilst in Government, we have increased funding for the NHS in real terms, with 8,000 more doctors and 2,000 more nurses treating patients on the frontline. We have also introduced a Five Year Forward plan for the NHS to ensure that we continue to meet growing demand in the future. It is a strong economy that will allow us to support NHS and the Government’s long-term economic plan will deliver that."