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Sandra Gidley Member of Parliament for Romsey |
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| Sandra Gidley | <info@sandragidley.org> |
NHS cuts will cost hundreds of lives in the South East12.00.00am BST (GMT +0100) Tue 4th Jul 2006 Leaked Department of Health documents seen by Sandra Gidley, MP for Romsey, suggests that delays to the promised National Bowel Cancer Screening Programme are likely to cost hundreds of lives in the South East. Sandra has signed a cross-party Early Day Motion, challenging Ministers to "come clean" and ensure that the programme is up and running as soon as possible. Bowel cancer is the second most common cause of cancer death in the UK, after lung cancer. In the South East, over 4,400 people will die of the disease every year. The Government's planned screening programme was due to start rolling out across the country this April. In a confidential policy paper published in July 2005, the Department of Health pledged to spend £12.5 million this year in providing tests. However, in a Parliamentary Answer in March 2006, Health Minister Rosie Winterton would not confirm this budget, saying only that: "departmental budgets for 2006-7 are currently under consideration by ministers." The continuing delays to the programme are costing hundreds of lives. Bowel cancer is fatal for about half of those who contract it, but research suggests that screening can reduce the mortality rate by 15%. This means that over 330 lives could be saved each year if the screening programme was rolled out in this region. Sandra said: "Ministers have been assuring us that NHS cuts won't affect the front line treatment of patients. This is clearly wrong. "It is time that the Department of Health comes clean over the extent of the crisis affecting the NHS. "The Government must ensure that the planned screening programme is begun without further delay, and release the necessary funds as a matter of urgency, as hundreds of lives are at risk." Ministers are denying there has been a delay to the programme but a departmental policy paper published in July 2005 - The National Bowel Cancer Screening Programme: Advice to the NHS (marked "restricted" - reveals that that the intention as late as last July was to ensure that "around 25% of England will be covered (by the new screening programme) by the end of 2006/07." However, a written answer from the Health Minister Rosie Winterton on 22 March stated that the "national rollout" only covers the current pilot scheme in Warwickshire, which covers only 2 million people - 1 in 25 people rather than the promised 1 in 4.
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Published and promoted by Sandra Gidley, 3A Victoria Place, Love Lane, Romsey SO51 8DE. The views expressed are those of the party, not of the service provider. |