Category Archives: health
One in four cancer patients ‘sent away by GPs’
One in four cancer patients with early signs of illness are being sent away by their GPs or wrongly diagnosed with minor ailments, a new report has found.
By Andrew Hough 7:00AM GMT 28 Feb 2011
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Researchers found tens of thousands of patients are being forced to make repeated trips to their doctors before being given correct diagnosis.
Despite showing early signs of cancer, many were told there was nothing to fear and were sent home armed with advice to only take painkillers or antibiotics.
The study, published by the Rarer Cancers Foundation, concluded that a quarter of patients were only diagnosed once the disease had spread to other organs, by which time it was often terminal. Many patients told researchers how their symptoms were misinterpreted by GPs and were dismissed as minor.
Experts blamed late diagnosis for what was described as high death rates and say many tumours were spotted too late for treatment. Figures show that Britain has one of the lowest cancer survival rates in Europe despite billions of pounds in treatment investment.
The Office for National Statistics recently found that the cancer death rate among British women was higher than in countries such as France, Italy and Portugal
Britain has national screening programmes for only three types of cancer: cervical, bowel and breast cancer. Tests are not yet accurate enough for other forms of the disease.
These hands which have:
Written exams
Played the piano
Played symphonies
Played the fool
Sensously touched
Clouted the kids
Peeled the spuds
Practised First Aid
Washed and ironed
Shaken with celebrities
Pointed the way for strangers
Eaten fish and chips on a street corner
Pushed the car
And rocked the cradle,
Are now yours to:
lift and carry
Feed and wash
Dress and undress
Comb and spary
Guide and hold
Stroke and caress
Comfort and reassure
And tuck you up,.
But they are still mine to wipe away my tears.
Britain is bottom of Euro league table at diagnosing Alzheimer’s
Britain is bottom of Euro league table at diagnosing Alzheimer’s
Britons with symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease take twice as long to be diagnosed as sufferers living in other European countries, research has found.
The UK has come bottom of a league table comparing dementia care in European countries, with an average time lag of two years and eight months between signs of Alzheimer’s disease being suspected by carers, and the medical diagnosis being made.
Delays were more than twice as long in Britain as in Italy and Germany, and nine months longer than in Poland.