logo
More Brits developing cancer than ever before but survival rates have doubled since 70s

More Brits developing cancer than ever before but survival rates have doubled since 70s

Scottish Sun02-06-2025
MORE Brits are developing cancer than ever before but we are twice as likely to survive the disease than patients in the 1970s, a report shows.
Cancer Research UK studied 50 years of data and found tumour rates increased by nearly half – 48 per cent – between 1973 and 2023.
Advertisement
1
More Brits are developing cancer than ever before but we are twice as likely to survive the disease than patients in the 1970s
Credit: Getty
There are now 607 cases per 100,000 people per year, compared to 413 per 100,000 then.
Cancer has become more common as people live longer and the risk rises with age, but cases are now increasing fastest in younger people.
Scientists are investigating whether unhealthy lifestyles now are driving up the disease further.
Meanwhile, treatment advances mean cancer is less deadly than ever, with the death rate tumbling from 328 per 100,000 to 252.
Advertisement
The proportion of people who survive 10 years or more after diagnosis has doubled from 24 to 50 per cent.
Michelle Mitchell, chief of Cancer Research UK, said: 'It's fantastic to see that thanks to research, cancer death rates have drastically reduced over the last 50 years, and survival has doubled.
'However, there is more that can be done.
'This report highlights that over 460 people die from cancer every day in the UK, and too many cases are diagnosed at a late stage.
Advertisement
'If we want to change that, we need bold action from the UK government and the upcoming National Cancer Plan for England must improve cancer survival and transform cancer services.'
The Cancer in the UK report warned that there has been almost no improvement to early diagnosis in the past 10 years.
If I had access to more information on breast health when I was younger, I may have caught my symptoms earlier
Nearly half of cases are still diagnosed in the later stages three and four, when a cure is much less likely.
CRUK said: 'The Government must make a concerted effort to reduce the number of people diagnosed with cancer at a later stage, with a focus on cancers that would lead to the greatest benefit in survival such as lung and bowel.'
Advertisement
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Terrifying mystery illness leaves patients 'like statues' - with brains still working
Terrifying mystery illness leaves patients 'like statues' - with brains still working

Daily Mirror

time15 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Terrifying mystery illness leaves patients 'like statues' - with brains still working

A bizarre epidemic swept across countries and claimed the lives of an estimated half a million people, leaving many survivors forever changed - and it remains one of the biggest medical mysteries in history For 11 years, a mysterious illness swept across the globe, sending sufferers into what seemed like a deep sleep - sometimes for months. ‌ The illness is estimated to have killed about a third of those who were affected, with another third suffering debilitating neurological symptoms if they survived - and some even becoming frozen, like statues, while their minds were totally active as normal. ‌ But many unanswered questions still surround encephalitis lethargica - which is also called epidemic encephalitis. The medical community has never reached a consensus about what definitely caused the illness, or why it seemed to suddenly disappear overnight, going from an epidemic that raged across borders to only a handful of cases ever appearing globally over decades. ‌ Urgent probe as 10 Brits die after agonising reaction to weight loss jabs 'I am a loo historian – you'll never guess what Tudors used to wipe their bums' Encephalitis lethargica (EL) was called the 'sleepy sickness', and from 1916 to 1927, the disease is estimated to have claimed 500,000 lives, and infected more than a million people. No group of people was safe from this disease: it could infect anyone, no matter their age, class, or gender. Patients often initially presented with flu-like symptoms - a cough, sore throat, or a fever - before rapidly becoming seriously ill. They would become extremely sleepy, start to experience double vision. ‌ This extreme lethargy sometimes saw people essentially comatose for weeks or months, but disturbingly, they were not actually asleep, though they seemed to be. Inside their minds, they were often awake and completely aware of what was going on around them, but unable to move or react. The disease also had the ability to cause profound changes in patients' personalities and behaviours - the variety of symptoms that came along with EL made it hard for doctors to understand what they were treating. It was only in 1917 that EL was officially described as a new disease, with doctors across Europe initially baffled at the range of neurological symptoms that patients were presenting. Dr. Constantin von Economo from the Psychiatric-Neurological Clinic of the University of Vienna was the one to give EL its name, but the medical community, whilst recognising the epidemic's existence, was no closer to learning what was causing it, or how to stop it. In 1918, the Spanish Flu pandemic was underway, and doctors speculated that EL, which often came on after flu-like symptoms, could be some kind of post-viral issue or that the conditions were linked. ‌ One third of EL sufferers would, after the acute face of extended 'sleep', recover, but another third died during this stage because of respiratory complications. Autopsies conducted on some patients who lost their lives in this phase of the illness showed that a small part of the base of the brain was inflamed. The final third of EL sufferers faced a lifetime of terrifying symptoms, that ranged from criminal levels of impulsivity to becoming like statues. This again, like the seeming sleep endured in the first phase of the illness, saw their minds remain completely active, but trapped with a frozen body. ‌ After initially recovering from the acute phase, patients would find themselves enduring personality changes - with their loved ones beginning to find them markedly different from who they were before the illness took hold. They would become disinterested in the world around them and struggle to concentrate, but things would be poised to rapidly get worse. Little did the victims of this haunting disease know, their brains were rapidly degenerating - in what is called post-encephalitic parkinsonism (PEP), and the damage could never be undone. This particularly impacted young people, who would find themselves becoming more unpredictable over the following decades of their lives. ‌ Children who caught the disease would become inconsiderate, exceptionally clingy, have poor concentration, and be restless. Initially, this could be manageable, albeit still a big job for parents to deal with, but as they grew up, they would become nigh on impossible to handle. "As they grew in strength, their incorrigible impulsiveness escalated in violence and they posed a danger to themselves and others," explains The Conversation."Errant behaviours included cruelty to anyone who crossed them; destructiveness; lying; and self-mutilation including, in one example, removal of eyes. "When they reached adolescence, these patients manifested inappropriate and excessive sexuality, including sexual assault without regard for age or gender." ‌ Strangely, the sufferers of EL would be remorseful when they did wrong, and understand that they should not have behaved that way, but they simply had no impulse control whatsoever, and tragically, the only thing that stopped their often violent or criminal behaviour would be the PEP - which slowly but surely took away their ability to move. Those cases who did not see their Parkinson's symptoms worsen would, however, often become hardened criminals: stealing, raping, and murdering with impunity - but perhaps without the mental ability to be truly responsible for their actions. ‌ But for those who saw the Parkinson's worsen, a tragic path awaited: the essential parts of human life would drift away from them. Sufferers would lose all willpower, though their minds would be active, they would have no ability to take action. Beauty became unrecognisable to them - though they could still acknowledge the technical ability of a great artist, they could no longer connect. They could recognise other people's pain and suffering, but could no longer feel sympathy for those around them. Their faces would be totally blank, like a mask. Their muscles became increasingly rigid, stopping them from moving, and they could no longer properly take part in the world - though all along their minds still were in working order in many ways. ‌ Trapped inside their bodies, and the ability to connect stripped from them, they would spend decades living inside institutions, with no treatment ever found that had long-term success. But then, in 1927, the disease practically vanished overnight. The number of those diagnosed or presenting with these complex symptoms rapidly decreased, and in the last 85 years, there have only been 80 recorded cases. However, researchers are still looking into encephalitis and this type of swelling of the brain, which can be an autoimmune response or occur after a virus. Many mysteries still surround EL itself - but until answers are found to why this terrifying illness took hold so quickly, and went away out of nowhere, its threat remains.

Popular baby toy sold at Boots for £10 is urgently recalled over ‘health risk' after mould found in boxes
Popular baby toy sold at Boots for £10 is urgently recalled over ‘health risk' after mould found in boxes

Scottish Sun

time19 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Popular baby toy sold at Boots for £10 is urgently recalled over ‘health risk' after mould found in boxes

Parents are being urged to bin this popular TOY TROUBLE Popular baby toy sold at Boots for £10 is urgently recalled over 'health risk' after mould found in boxes Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A POPULAR children's toy sold in Boots has been urgently recalled over fears it could pose a health risk to youngsters. The issue affects a batch of See and Sound Giant Flashcards made by Orchard Toys and sold nationwide, including in Boots stores across the UK. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Orchard Toys See and Sound Flashcards — safety alert issued after mould found in boxes, posing potential health risk, says OPSS Credit: Boots 3 The product is sold for around £10 and is aimed at babies and toddlers as a fun way to learn animal names and sounds Credit: The Office for Product Safety and Standards (OPSS) issued the warning after confirming the batch poses a potential health risk. The product is sold for around £10 and is aimed at babies and toddlers as a fun way to learn animal names and sounds. The recall only applies to a specific batch — code SPHK/001622/132/16.01.25 — which can be found printed on the side of the packaging. No other batch numbers are affected. Parents and carers are being urged to check their toy boxes immediately. Anyone who owns the flashcards should stop using them, take a photo of the batch code, and dispose of the item safely. Those affected are entitled to a refund or digital credit voucher by contacting Orchard Toys directly. You can phone 01953 423422 or visit their website here. Aldi urgently recalls £3.29 freezer essential over dangerous disease that affects 1 in 100 of Brits The OPSS said the risk is classed as low, but could be harmful to children or adults with weakened immune systems, lung conditions or mould allergies. "The product presents a health risk as there may be mould present in the base of the product box. "Mould may pose a health risk to individuals with compromised immune systems, damaged lungs or allergies," the recall notice warned. The flashcards come in a colourful rectangular box and feature cartoon animal characters. They are part of a popular line of educational toys aimed at young children. Orchard Toys confirmed the affected product does not meet the requirement of the Toys (Safety) Regulations 2011, a set of rules designed to ensure childnren's toys are safe to use. The toy was manufactured int he UK and is not counterfeit. Product recalls like this are issued when items pose a risk to health, even if the danger is only present in some batches or under certain conditions. This comes just days after another recall involving toys sold online, including a remote-control car imported from China that contained unsafe chemical levels and posed a serious health risk. If you have any concerns about a product you've bough for your child, you can check the official government product recalls and alerts page. Safety experts advise parents to regularly inspect children's toys for damage, strange smells, or any signs of mould, especially if they've been stored in damp areas. Your product recall rights Chief consumer reporter James Flanders reveals all you need to know. Product recalls are an important means of protecting consumers from dangerous goods. As a general rule, if a recall involves a branded product, the manufacturer would usually have lead responsibility for the recall action. But it's often left up to supermarkets to notify customers when products could put them at risk. If you are concerned about the safety of a product you own, always check the manufacturer's website to see if a safety notice has been issued. When it comes to appliances, rather than just food items, the onus is usually on you - the customer - to register the appliance with the manufacturer as if you don't there is no way of contacting you to tell you about a fault. If you become aware that an item you own has been recalled or has any safety noticed issued against it, make sure you follow the instructions given to you by the manufacturer. They should usually provide you with more information and a contact number on its safety notice. In some cases, the manufacturer might ask you to return the item for a full refund or arrange for the faulty product to be collected. You should not be charged for any recall work - such as a repair, replacement or collection of the recalled item

Edinburgh fundraising walk for 'ray of sunshine' Anna who died months after cancer diagnosis
Edinburgh fundraising walk for 'ray of sunshine' Anna who died months after cancer diagnosis

Scotsman

timea day ago

  • Scotsman

Edinburgh fundraising walk for 'ray of sunshine' Anna who died months after cancer diagnosis

On a beautiful September day in 2023, a father and daughter duo from Bo'ness took on the 7 Hills Challenge in Edinburgh. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Organised by Business Beats Cancer Edinburgh to support Cancer Research UK, it was a chance for Andrew and Anna Walker to raise funds and have a great day out in a city they both loved. While the Walker family had not been directly touched by cancer, several family friends had received cancer diagnoses and they wanted to do their bit to help. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Andrew and Anna were delighted to play a part in helping to raise just under £42,000, including Gift Aid. Anna was a pure ray of sunshine and loved travelling but was a Bo'ness girl through and through. Sadly, just 15 months later the Walkers were facing their own heartbreaking news. Anna, 25, was in her third year of a teaching degree at the University of Stirling when high blood pressure saw her make an appointment with the GP. On January 3, the Walker family were devastated to learn that Anna had a cancerous tumour. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Further tests later that month revealed the tumour on her adrenal gland was a rare neuroendocrine cancer – called a pheochromocytoma – which was spreading aggressively. On a beautiful day in September 2023, Anna and Andrew were delighted to complete the 7 Hills Challenge, pictured here on the top of Arthur's Seat. While ruling out an operation, Anna's consultants were working on a plan of treatment when, on February 4, she fell ill and was admitted to Forth Valley Royal Hospital. A day later, just a month after diagnosis, the family were told the tumour had enlarged and the cancer had spread; there were no viable treatments, only palliative care. After five days in the hospital and five days at Strathcarron Hospice, Anna decided she wanted to spend her last days at home in Bo'ness. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad She spent two weeks there before her medical needs saw her being readmitted to the hospice, where she passed away surrounded by the love of her family on March 9. It meant the world to Anna to graduate with her teaching degree; she is pictured here with her university friends (back l-r) Zoe Ramsay and Caitlin Spence and (front left) Brooke Heary. Described as a ray of sunshine by everyone who knew and loved her, throughout it all Anna remained the same determined young woman, who loved life to the full, she'd always been. And it is in Anna's memory that they will all be taking part in this year's Business Beats Cancer Edinburgh event on August 29. Team Be Like Anna will be led by her mum and dad, Debby, 50, and Andrew, 51, and brother Ross, 22, with many other members of the family and some of her closest friends joining them. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Several of Anna's university friends have also signed up (see separate story, top right), taking Team Be Like Anna to around 40 walkers. Family friends being diagnosed with cancer inspired Andrew and Anna (front) to raise funds for Cancer Research at the 7 Hills Challenge; they are pictured here with their walking team, having conquered Corstorphine Hill. They will jointly be raising funds for research into rare cancers, similar to that Anna was diagnosed with. Other teams taking part in Business Beats Cancer Edinburgh's 7 Hills Challenge will also raise funds for Cancer Research UK, but the whole event this year has been dedicated in Anna's memory. Andrew said: 'Anna will be our motivation and she'll be with us in memory every step of the way. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'We're incredibly indebted to the Business Beats Cancer Edinburgh team for dedicating this year's 7 Hills Challenge in her memory. 'It will be a very emotional day for all of us; when we did it in 2023, Anna was not long back from 18 months abroad – she spent a year as an au pair in Australia, before travelling with her boyfriend Dylan to South East Asia. 'At that point, our family had not been touched by cancer in any tangible way. However, several family friends had recently been diagnosed and that was our motivation. 'It was a beautiful day – the weather was amazing and it was a brilliant way to see Edinburgh, where I was born and educated and Anna knew and loved, from a totally different perspective. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'This time, our team – Be Like Anna – is raising money for research specifically targeting rare cancers. 'Remarkably, few cancer specialists have come across a patient like Anna with an illness that progressed as quickly as it did. 'Anna was nothing if not determined at every turn in her life; that was true right through her illness and right to the end. 'She would be content knowing that we're doing something in her name to perhaps help make a difference for other families in years to come.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Lou Kiddier, Business Beats Cancer Edinburgh chairwoman, is hoping even more people will sign up to this year's challenge – raising much-needed funds for cancer research. She said: 'This year's 7 Hills Challenge means more to us than ever as we're walking in memory of Anna. 'In 2023, this beautiful, happy-go-lucky young woman joined us on the 7 Hills Challenge. 'In January 2025, Anna was told she had a rare cancer. Two cruel months later, aged just 25, she left this world – and left her family heartbroken and devastated. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Anna's story is a stark reminder that cancer doesn't care who you are. It's why the research we support matters so much. 'So, this one's for Anna. For her family. For her friends. Please walk with us on August 29.' If you would like to sign up a work team, email [email protected]. A Millennium baby, Anna was born in Forth Valley Royal Hospital on December 8, 1999, and went on to be educated at Deanburn Primary and the Academy. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Although a Bo'ness lass through and through, she didn't confine herself – a free spirit, her 'adopted dad' Adam in Australia called her a child of the world as she loved travelling and meeting people from all over. Indeed, she had friends in almost every continent! 'She was just that type of girl,' said Andrew. 'She was a true ray of sunshine who knew, and was loved by, so many people.' Among their number were the staff at So Strawberry Caffe in Linlithgow, where Anna worked from the age of 14 and continued to work throughout her university studies. Not afraid of hard graft, last summer Anna also started working as a carer with Bield, another job she held down while studying for her teaching degree. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Initially after leaving school, Anna trained as cabin crew but decided after a year it wasn't for her. She then worked at Nippers Nursery in Kirkliston which cemented her decision to pursue teaching, specifically early years. 'A few days after she was diagnosed, she was due to start a placement at a primary school in Grangemouth,' said Andrew. 'When she called the university to give them an update on her prognosis, they were absolutely amazing. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'During her 14 days at home, they decided she would be graduating with her degree and the university team held a lovely ceremony here with her family and friends. 'Anna's gran was a teacher and she'd also been inspired by one of her teachers at Deanburn Primary; it meant the world to her to get her degree and for us to see that. It was a lovely day.' The outpouring of love for Anna has also helped support and bolster the Walkers since her passing. An incredible number of events have been organised to raise funds in her memory for Strathcarron Hospice where Anna spent the last ten days of her life. That too has been a huge comfort for her family. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'The fact so much fundraising has gone on in the aftermath of losing Anna is testament to the type of girl she was,' her dad said. 'The Strathcarron fundraising page in Anna's memory is sitting at more than £10,000 just now. 'There's been a fashion show in Linlithgow, people bungee jumping off a bridge at Killiecrankie, 10K events, marathons and one of her best friends is even doing a skydive. 'The scale of fundraising and the response has been remarkable – it's blown us all away. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Life after Anna's passing has been difficult. It's a path we never wanted to be on and never thought we would be on. 'We all miss her – every minute of every day – but doing fundraising events in her memory and seeing how much other people have also rallied to do likewise is incredibly positive. 'It's something Anna would have wholeheartedly approved of.' The Walkers are delighted that people are also raising funds for Strathcarron, where Anna received palliative care in her final days. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Andrew explained: 'Strathcarron did such an incredible job looking after Anna, despite rarely seeing someone with her type of cancer. 'We spoke to specialists at the Beatson, consultants at Forth Valley Royal Hospital and doctors at Strathcarron. 'Everyone we spoke to said they had rarely seen a cancer progress like that in someone of Anna's age. 'That made palliative care slightly more difficult for the team at Strathcarron but they went above and beyond in how they dealt with Anna and us as a family. That place means the world to us. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Therefore, we're delighted Anna's friends are raising funds for both research into rare cancers and for palliative care treatment at Strathcarron. 'It's all in Anna's memory and we can't thank everyone enough for the incredible support they have given to us and the love they've shown for Anna.' With the Walkers now gearing up for the 7 Hills Challenge on August 29, they'll be busy in the next month getting their steps in. For, unlike the walk with Anna in 2023 – when they travelled between the hills via car – this time round they'll be hoofing the route every step of the 27km loop. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It should take Team Be Like Anna around six hours all in, scaling the seven summits and distances between. For Andrew, it might be a wee bit of a walk in the park compared to other team members. For as Scottish Water's head of corporate affairs, he has taken on many walking challenges for another cause close to his heart, WaterAid. Just for fun, he's also bagged more than 100 Munros – at least 12 of which he completed with Anna. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad However, he's still getting his steps in to make sure he's ready for the big event on August 29. He added: 'It's a wee bit more of a challenge this time as we're walking the whole route, which makes it a big old walk. 'Knowing we're doing it in Anna's memory will help push every one of us to the finish line. Anna would be determined to do it – we will be too.' Team Be Like Anna has so far raised £2420 + £560 in Gift Aid; to support them visit An outpouring of love for Anna Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad In the four months since Anna's passing, friends and family have struggled to come to terms with her sudden passing. In the void that such a lively and caring lassie has left, they have been inspired by her love for life and steely determination. And, in Anna's memory, they've already pulled out all the stops to raise more than £10,000 for Strathcarron Hospice … and counting. A host of other events have also been lined up this year which will see that fundraising tally soar even higher. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Anna's uncle Scott has already completed a 10K and half marathon in her honour and is gearing up for a marathon in September. The Walkers have also been invited to take part in another walk, organised by Anna's friend, Lauren, from Chichester and will be travelling down south later this year to join in. Andrew said: 'Anna met Lauren seven years ago when she spent the summer at Camp Thailand, teaching children English. They've been friends ever since. 'Lauren is doing a 25-mile walk between Bognor and Brighton beaches for Strathcarron Hospice later this year and we're planning on going down as a family to take part. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'The sheer scale of fundraising in Anna's memory is overwhelming. 'Our hope is that, between the research and palliative care funds, it will help other families in the future.' If you'd like to lend your support, visit

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store