07 December 2016
Simon Stevens sets out ambitious action to improve survival and quality of life for people with cancer
NHS England's chief executive Simon Stevens announced yesterday
the first wave of hospitals to benefit from a major national
investment in NHS radiotherapy machines alongside £200m of funding
over two years to improve local cancer services.
Speaking at the Britain Against Cancer conference in London on
Tuesday 6 December, Mr Stevens said that survival rates are now at
their highest ever.
Mr Stevens said NHS England is ramping up efforts on early
diagnosis and to help people live well with and beyond cancer.
Latest data shows that national one year survival rates for all
cancers continue to rise, as do rates for breast, colorectal and
lung cancer individually.
It is announced the hospitals which will receive new LINACs
are:
- North Cumbria University Hospitals NHS Trust
- The Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
- Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
- The Clatterbridge Cancer Centre NHS Foundation Trust
- University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust
- University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust
- Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust
- University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust
- University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation
Trust
- South Devon Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
- Royal Surrey County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
- University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
- University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust
- Hull and East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust
- Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
The £200m fund has been set up to encourage local areas to find
new and innovative ways to diagnose cancer earlier, improve the
care for those living with cancer and ensure each cancer patient
gets the right care for them.
Cancer Alliances are being asked to bid for a share of the £200m
fund to use to invest in three priority areas:
Early diagnosis
- Early diagnosis can save lives, so extra funding will be given
to local NHS doctors and managers who have the best ideas about
helping people to get their diagnosis quicker and stop them
bouncing between GPs and hospitals. This could mean supporting
specific tools for GPs to use to help them recognise cancer, like
the Macmillan decision support tool; setting up diagnosis services
to be able to test and rule out a number of different things
quickly; and improving local communications systems to ensure
information is passed securely and quickly between hospitals and GP
surgeries.
Care during and after cancer treatment - "Recovery Package"
- The aim of the Recovery Package is to help ensure patients have
more personal care and support from the point they are diagnosed.
For a patient this means working with their clinician to develop a
comprehensive plan outlining not only their physical needs, but
also other support they may need, such as help at home or financial
advice.
Care after cancer treatment
- Once treatment is finished, it is vital that people continue to
have the right care and support. This will be different for
everyone and it is important to work with people to develop an
appropriate plan to suit them, instead of a one size fits all
approach where people are booked in for appointments at set time
scales. Some areas are doing this very successfully, but for others
the additional funding could be used to personalise follow up to
individual needs and preferences - for some, more intensive
clinical support is needed, but others may feel confident to take
control and manage their own care, seeking support when
needed.
Following the recently announced investment of £130m to
kickstart the upgrade of radiotherapy equipment and transform
cancer treatment across England, work has been under way to
identify where there is greatest need and today it will be
announced that 15 hospitals will receive a LINAC in the first wave
of investment. See list below.
These announcements follow the recent publication of a national
scheme which offers hospitals financial incentives to take action
on prevention and to improve the quality of life for people with
cancer.
On prevention, this includes supporting people who drink alcohol
above the lower risk levels and those who smoke to reduce their
risk of developing cancer in the future. For quality of life it
includes systematically reviewing a patient's response to
chemotherapy treatment.
BACK TO NEWS