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Woman, 28, raced from her own bowel cancer op to say goodbye to her dying mum
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Woman, 28, raced from her own bowel cancer op to say goodbye to her dying mum
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Patients diagnosed with a BRAF-mutated bowel cancer in Scotland will have a new treatment available to them if the disease is found to have spread PATIENTS in Scotland with a rare but particularly deadly form of colorectal cancer will have access to a new life-extending therapy on the NHS for the first time. The Scottish Medicines Consortium has given the go ahead for Braftovi to be used in combination with cetuximab in patients whose cancer has the BRAF V600 genetic mutation. This is present in around 15 per cent of patients with early-stage colorectal cancer and 6% of those whose disease has spread, with patients in this latter category typically surviving just four to six months from diagnosis.
Bowel Cancer Awareness Month: Charlene White raises awareness and speaks about her mother
Bowel cancer is the UK s second biggest cancer killer but it is treatable and curable, especially when diagnosed and treated early
RAISING AWARENESS: Charlene White encouraged people not to feel embarrassed (Photo by Dave J Hogan/Dave J Hogan/Getty Images)
BROADCASTER CHARLENE White raised awareness of bowel cancer on daytime television this morning.
White, who lost her mother to the illness and is a patron for a charity that helps those with bowel cancer, told viewers what symptoms to look out for, and urged them not to be embarrassed when discussing and checking their bowel movements.
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Twenty-two empty two-seater sofas represent the 44 people who lose their lives every day due to bowel cancer
Twenty-two empty two-seater sofas took over Sunderland’s Stadium of Light this week to represent the 44 people who lose their lives every day due to bowel cancer, the UK’s second biggest cancer killer, which is more than 16,000 lives lost every year.
Sofa and carpet specialist, ScS, has been working with ITV’s Lorraine to raise awareness of bowel cancer and its symptoms, which if caught early enough, can often be cured by treatment and prevent it from coming back.
Bowel cancer survivor, Deborah James, presented part of the ITV show live from an ScS sofa at the stadium on Tuesday 20 April 20, to talk about issues surrounding this type of cancer, urging people to check for symptoms and visit a doctor if they are worried. The Stadium of Light was chosen as it holds 49,000 seats, a number close to those diagnos
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