Bowel Cancer Alert Sample


Alert Sample

Alert results for: Bowel Cancer

Information between 26th February 2024 - 16th April 2024

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Parliamentary Debates
Oral Answers to Questions
157 speeches (9,512 words)
Monday 18th March 2024 - Commons Chamber
Department for Work and Pensions
Mentions:
1: Alistair Strathern (Lab - Mid Bedfordshire) A bowel cancer survivor with severe arthritis, she was made to stay on a phone call for over three hours - Link to Speech



Written Answers
Cancer: Screening
Asked by: Rachael Maskell (Labour (Co-op) - York Central)
Monday 15th April 2024

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what estimate she has made of the timeline for meeting cancer screening uptake targets for (a) breast, (b) cervical, (c) bowel and (d) prostate cancer.

Answered by Andrew Stephenson - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)

The Government is committed to improving uptake in all screening programmes, including for breast, bowel, and cervical screening. There is no national screening programme for prostate cancer. The improvement in cancer screening programmes is not predicated on a specific timeline, but is focusing on targeting specific groups where uptake is low.

NHS England has developed a national improvement plan in collaboration with key stakeholders to improve uptake within the breast screening programme. This plan will encompass a series of evaluative projects, which are expected to report in April 2024

A range of improvements and innovations have been brought in to help improve uptake in the NHS Cervical Screening Programme. For example, appointments are being made available during evenings and weekends, and in some areas cervical screening appointments can be made in any primary care setting, rather than just at one’s own general practice.

In addition, we are also working to test the effectiveness of human papillomavirus infection self-sampling as a primary cervical screening option, with individuals taking their own cervical screening sample. The findings from this evaluation will be used to inform a UK National Screening Committee recommendation, and it is expected that self-sampling could lead to an increase in uptake as it will reduce some of the barriers that prevent people from attending a screening.

Uptake in the NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Programme is currently above the achievable threshold of 60%, between 1 July and 30 September 2023 it was 67.4%, and therefore the focus for this screening programme is on gradually reducing the age of the eligible cohort from 60 years old down to 50 years old, to increase to numbers eligible for this programme.

Cancer: Screening
Asked by: Rachael Maskell (Labour (Co-op) - York Central)
Monday 15th April 2024

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what steps she is taking to increase the uptake of screening for (a) breast, (b) cervical, (c) bowel and (d) prostate cancer.

Answered by Andrew Stephenson - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)

The Government is committed to improving uptake in all screening programmes, including for breast, bowel, and cervical screening. There is no national screening programme for prostate cancer. The improvement in cancer screening programmes is not predicated on a specific timeline, but is focusing on targeting specific groups where uptake is low.

NHS England has developed a national improvement plan in collaboration with key stakeholders to improve uptake within the breast screening programme. This plan will encompass a series of evaluative projects, which are expected to report in April 2024

A range of improvements and innovations have been brought in to help improve uptake in the NHS Cervical Screening Programme. For example, appointments are being made available during evenings and weekends, and in some areas cervical screening appointments can be made in any primary care setting, rather than just at one’s own general practice.

In addition, we are also working to test the effectiveness of human papillomavirus infection self-sampling as a primary cervical screening option, with individuals taking their own cervical screening sample. The findings from this evaluation will be used to inform a UK National Screening Committee recommendation, and it is expected that self-sampling could lead to an increase in uptake as it will reduce some of the barriers that prevent people from attending a screening.

Uptake in the NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Programme is currently above the achievable threshold of 60%, between 1 July and 30 September 2023 it was 67.4%, and therefore the focus for this screening programme is on gradually reducing the age of the eligible cohort from 60 years old down to 50 years old, to increase to numbers eligible for this programme.

Gastrointestinal Cancer: Diagnosis
Asked by: Jim Shannon (Democratic Unionist Party - Strangford)
Thursday 7th March 2024

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what steps her Department is taking to improve the rate of early diagnosis of (a) bowel and (b) bowel-related cancers.

Answered by Andrew Stephenson - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)

The Department is taking steps to improve the rate of early diagnosis for all cancers, including bowel and bowel-related cancers, and is working jointly with NHS England on implementing the delivery plan, for tackling the COVID-19 related backlogs in elective care. This includes plans to spend more than £8 billion from 2022/23 to 2024/25 to help drive up and protect elective activity, including cancer diagnosis and treatment.

NHS England is working to meet the Faster Diagnosis Standard, which sets a target of 28 days from urgent referral by a general practitioner or screening programme to patients being told that they have cancer, or that cancer is ruled out. To achieve this target NHS England has: streamlined bowel cancer pathways by implementing faecal immunochemical testing triage for patients in primary and secondary care settings on a suspected cancer pathway; implemented non-symptom specific pathways for patients who present with non-specific symptoms, or combinations of non-specific symptoms, that can indicate several different cancers; and has opened community diagnostic centres across England, expanding diagnostic capacity and by prioritising this capacity for cancer services.

In 2023 the NHS England’s Help Us Help You campaign urged people to take up the offer of bowel screening when invited, and the screening offer for the bowel screening programme is being gradually extended from age 60 down to 50 years old by 2025, ensuring more people are screened and potentially diagnosed with bowel cancer at the earliest stage.  The National Health Service is also now offering routine preventative bowel cancer screening to thousands of people in England with a genetic condition, Lynch syndrome, that increases their chance of developing bowel cancer and other certain other cancers. This gives the NHS a better chance of finding cancers at a time when they can be more easily and effectively treated.

Bowel Cancer
Asked by: Jim Shannon (Democratic Unionist Party - Strangford)
Thursday 7th March 2024

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what steps her Department is taking to help ensure equality in bowel cancer outcomes.

Answered by Andrew Stephenson - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)

The National Health Service is taking several steps to improve bowel cancer outcomes for patients across England. The NHS is working towards its Long Term Plan’s ambition of diagnosing 75% of all stageable cancers at stage one and two, by 2028. Achieving this will mean that an additional 55,000 people each year will survive their cancer for at least five years after diagnosis.  With progress made on reducing waiting times, cancer is being diagnosed at an earlier stage more often, with survival rates improving across almost all types of cancer.

In 2023, NHS England’s Help Us Help You campaign urged people to take up the offer of bowel screening when invited, while gradually extending the screening offer from those aged 60 down to 50 years old, ensuring more people are diagnosed with bowel cancer at the earliest stage.

The NHS is also now offering routine preventative bowel cancer screening to thousands of people in England with a genetic condition, Lynch syndrome, that increases their chance of developing bowel cancer and certain other cancers. This gives the NHS a better chance of finding cancers at a time when they can be more easily and effectively treated.

Tackling disparities is important in improving all types of cancer outcomes. The Government is committed to its levelling up mission, to narrow the gap in healthy life expectancy by 2030 and increase healthy life expectancy by five years by 2035. Our approach will continue to focus on supporting people to live healthier lives, helping the NHS and social care provide the best treatment and care for patients, and tackling health disparities through national and system interventions such as the NHS’s Core20PLUS5 programme.

The Office for Health Improvement and Disparities was set up to address health inequalities with a range of interventions, including accelerating prevention programmes, reducing digital exclusion, supporting general practice in deprived communities, and improving health literacy.



Department Publications - Policy paper
Monday 8th April 2024
Ministry of Justice
Source Page: Wymott Prison: Action Plan
Document: inspection report for Wymott Prison (PDF)

Found: Preventative screening programmes, including those for bowel cancer were available , and monthly audit

Friday 1st March 2024
Ministry of Justice
Source Page: Morton Hall Prison: Action Plan
Document: inspection report for Morton Hall Prison (PDF)

Found: An administrator ensured that all eligible men received national screening , such as bowel cancer and



Non-Departmental Publications - Policy paper
Apr. 08 2024
HM Prison and Probation Service
Source Page: Wymott Prison: Action Plan
Document: inspection report for Wymott Prison (PDF)
Policy paper

Found: Preventative screening programmes, including those for bowel cancer were available , and monthly audit

Mar. 01 2024
HM Prison and Probation Service
Source Page: Morton Hall Prison: Action Plan
Document: inspection report for Morton Hall Prison (PDF)
Policy paper

Found: An administrator ensured that all eligible men received national screening , such as bowel cancer and



Non-Departmental Publications - Statistics
Mar. 14 2024
NHS England
Source Page: Q1 (1 April to 30 June 2023) ANNB and YPA screening KPI data
Document: (ODS)
Statistics

Found: cancer screening), within the invited screening episode, at time of reporting.

Mar. 14 2024
NHS England
Source Page: Q2 (1 July to 30 September 2023) ANNB and YPA screening KPI data
Document: (ODS)
Statistics

Found: cancer screening), within the invited screening episode, at time of reporting.

Mar. 14 2024
NHS England
Source Page: Bowel Cancer Screening: Annual Report 2021 to 2022
Document: (ODS)
Statistics

Found: Bowel Cancer Screening: Annual Report 2021 to 2022

Mar. 14 2024
NHS England
Source Page: Bowel Cancer Screening: Annual Report 2021 to 2022
Document: Bowel Cancer Screening: Annual Report 2021 to 2022 (webpage)
Statistics

Found: Bowel Cancer Screening: Annual Report 2021 to 2022

Feb. 29 2024
Office for Health Improvement and Disparities
Source Page: SACN annual report 2023
Document: SACN annual report 2023 - full report and annexes (PDF)
Statistics

Found: 106 Working Group on Nutrition and Maternal Health Professor Annie Anderson Personal interests Bowel




Bowel Cancer mentioned in Scottish results


Scottish Written Answers
S6W-25854
Asked by: Mochan, Carol (Scottish Labour - South Scotland)
Monday 11th March 2024

Question

To ask the Scottish Government what work it is doing to improve the uptake and successful return of bowel screening kits.

Answered by Minto, Jenni - Minister for Public Health and Women's Health

A report recently published by Public Health Scotland on 5 May confirmed that uptake for bowel screening continues to exceed the Healthcare Improvement Scotland standard of 60%. The Scottish Government is aware that continued work is required to improve uptake, and to make the process as straightforward as possible for individuals to complete.

Education and accessible information is one strand of this work. Both the online NHS Inform bowel screening content and the leaflets issued with bowel screening kits have been revised to respond to user feedback on clarity and accessibility. In addition, both the Scottish Government and the NHS will use Bowel Cancer Awareness Month in April to further raise awareness of the importance of bowel screening.

Increasing uptake requires supporting education efforts with a relentless focus on reducing inequalities. The Equity in Screening Strategy was published last year, with a vision for equitable access across the full screening pathway, including in the bowel screening programme. This, in combination with a new Equity in Screening Network, will help NHS Boards to find effective ways to address inequalities in uptake, and increase participation in the bowel screening programme.

Since 2017, the Scottish Government has provided £1 million funding annually to address screening inequalities. Part of this fund has been distributed to NHS Boards, allowing them to support initiatives catering to their specific populations. The remainder of the screening inequalities fund was used for national initiatives, such as the development of the Screening Intelligence Platform (ScIP). This will provide an efficient, single point of access to linkable data from all of the National Screening Programmes, including bowel screening. This will therefore help to inform and support the work of public sector bodies to increase participation in bowel screening.



Scottish Parliamentary Debates
First Minister’s Question Time
90 speeches (48,657 words)
Thursday 7th March 2024 - Main Chamber
Mentions:
1: Sarwar, Anas (Lab - Glasgow) Only one in five people is getting crucial bowel cancer tests on time, which is shocking when cancer - Link to Speech

Social Security (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
145 speeches (87,003 words)
Thursday 7th March 2024 - Committee
Mentions:
1: None I am sorry to go on, but our network is currently advising people who are going through bowel cancer - Link to Speech