From msn.com/en-us
- Early Detection Saves Lives: Rishi Sunak emphasizes that early prostate checks can spot tumours early, improving survival and making treatment easier, cheaper, and more effective.
- Screening Events This Week: Men aged 40+ can attend subsidised £12.50 tests at six nationwide sessions, including (UK) National Screening Day on Saturday, with results sent confidentially.
- Targeted Screening Debate: Currently, the UKNSC recommends screening only for men with BRCA1/BRCA2 mutations, but campaigns push for a broader national programme to prevent unnecessary deaths.
Rishi Sunak is renewing calls for a 'vital' national prostate cancer screening programme as he prepares to attend a testing open day.
The former Conservative Prime Minister is urging men to get checks this week at one of six sessions nationwide.
Men can book a potentially life-saving test for the subsidised price of £12.50, which will check the health of their prostate and could spot early signs of a tumour.
National Screening Day is on Saturday, but Prostate Cancer Research and The Graham Fulford Charitable Trust has organised events for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday as well.
Catching prostate cancer early boosts survival chances, and treatment is typically easier, cheaper and more effective.
It is the most common cancer in the UK, with 63,000 cases and 12,000 deaths each year – but unlike breast, bowel and lung cancer, there is no national screening programme.
The Daily Mail is campaigning to end needless prostate cancer deaths and for a national prostate cancer screening programme, initially targeted at high-risk men, including those who are black, have a family history of the disease or particular genetic mutations.
Writing for the Daily Mail, Mr Sunak says: 'We are at a pivotal moment for men's health in this country. The Government has the chance to save countless lives by introducing a targeted screening programme.'
It would not recommend full screening using the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood test because it may result in too many men undergoing unnecessary biopsies or surgery for slow-growing tumours that might never have caused them harm.
But a review by York Health Economics Consortium has since discovered that it relied on outdated data, diagnosis methods and treatments. Health Secretary Wes Streeting has the authority to overrule the UKNSC, which is due to publish its final recommendation later this month.
David James, of Prostate Cancer Research, said: 'Prostate cancer is now the most commonly diagnosed cancer in the UK – yet it is the only major cancer without a national screening programme. That is costing lives.
'Too many men are diagnosed only once the disease has spread, when treatment becomes harder and survival chances plummet. National Screening Day is a vital reminder of the problem.'


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