Macmillan Cancer Support
Macmillan offers a variety of support for people diagnosed with cancer. From information, to support groups. Visit the website to find out more.
Phone
0808 808 00 00
Website
www.macmillan.org.ukCancer Research UK
Cancer Research UK provides a variety of information about cancer, including causes, types and ways of supporting those who have been diagnosed.
Phone
0300 123 1022
Website
www.cancerresearchuk.orgMove More Wandsworth
Move More is a service to help you get and stay active and is available to anyone who’s had a cancer diagnosis.
Website
Move More WandsworthFinancial Support
There are charities that can offer grants and information about grants to adults with cancer and their families.
Cancer Research
Financial Support CharitiesPodcasts
– Talking Cancer Podcast
– Sickboy
– The Cancer Secrets PodcastCharities
Cancer charities and cancer information.
Website
Children’s Cancer and Leukaemia GroupTherapeutic treatments
Counselling – Lucy Kralj
Lucy offers individual, open-ended therapy to adults (over 16 years of age). She has a consulting room in Tooting, South West London and is also happy to offer home or hospital visits or to use video-link for therapy.
Phone
07854 222408
Website
www.cancercounsellinglondon.org.uk
Email
lucykralj@gmail.comCancer Care Map
This is a simple, online resource that helps you find cancer support services in your local area.You can search for services related to specific types of cancer, for example, breast cancer and prostate cancer. Please use the link below to find cancer support services near you.
Website
www.cancercaremap.orgBooks
– What Happens When Someone I Love Has Cancer? Explain the Science of Cancer and How a Loved One’s Diagnosis and Treatment Affects a Kid’s Day-to-Day Life by Sara Olsher (Clicking will take you to a purchase page for this book on Amazon)
– F*** You Cancer: How to Face the Big C, Live your Life and Still be Yourself by Deborah James (Clicking will take you to a purchase page for this book on Amazon)
– Living with the Long-Term Effects of Cancer: Acknowledging Trauma and other Emotional Challenges by Dr Cordelia Galgut (Clicking will take you to a purchase page for this book on Amazon)
Cancer screening
Cancer is a word that we are taught to fear from a very young age. But the reality is that it affects a large proportion of us. Based on data gathered between 2015 and 2017, approximately 39.5% of the population with be diagnosed with cancer at some point in their lifetime.
As medicine has progressed, so has the outlook for recovery from cancer. Early detection greatly contributes to this. As a result you are offered regular screening for some of the most common cancers, including cervical, breast and bowel cancers.
Prostate cancer
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men in the UK, with around 1 in 8 men diagnosed with prostate cancer in their lifetime. There is currently no screening programme for prostate cancer in the UK, as it has not been proved that the benefits would outweigh the risks.
Instead, there is an informed choice programme, called prostate cancer risk management. The programme is for healthy men aged 50 or over, who ask their GP about PSA testing, which checks prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels.
Prostate cancer UK
It’s the most common cancer in men, but most men with early prostate cancer don’t have symptoms.
Prostate cancer is not always life-threatening. But when it is, the earlier you catch it the more likely it is to be cured.
Website
www.prostatecanceruk.orgNHS prostate cancer
Website
NHS: Prostate cancerProstate cancer screening
Cervical cancer
The NHS offers a cervical screening programme from 25 years of age, also known as a smear test. This is recommended to be repeated every three years up until 49 years of age, dependent upon the results of the screen, and every five years between the ages of 50 and 64.
The cervical cancer screen initially checks for Human Papillomavirus (HPV), the virus which causes most cervical cancers. This helps to identify not only those who already have cervical cancer, but those who are at an increased risk of developing it. This could prevent around 600 additional cancers each year.
Book online with a nurse or call reception if you receive an invite or feel you are due a screen.
Cervical cancer
Website
NHS: Cervical cancerCervical cancer screening
Breast cancer
Breast cancer is extremely common. So much so, that 1 in 8 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer at some point during their lives. Screening, also known as a mammogram, is offered to anyone registered as female with their GP between the ages of 50 and 71. If you have a particularly high risk of developing breast cancer you may receive a screening invitation earlier than 50 years of age, and you can still request mammograms after turning 71.
It is very important that, should you experience any symptoms such as finding a lump in your breast tissue, you do not wait to be offered a screen but make an appointment immediately with your GP.
Book online with a nurse or call reception if you receive an invite or feel you are due a screen.
Having a mammogram
Watch this short video on YouTube detailing what to expect when going for a mammogram.
Video
Having a mammogram | Cancer Research UKInformation for trans people
If you are transgender, for more information read through the ‘Information for trans people.
Leaflet
NHS Screening Programmes’ document from Public Health England (PDF)Regional breast screening
If you are unsure about attending your screening, please watch this video.
Video
Breast Cancer Screening at The Rose Centre at St George’s hospitalNHS: breast cancer
Website
NHS: Breast CancerNHS: breast cancer screening
Website
NHS: Breast ScreeningBreast screening: helping women decide
An easy guide to breast screening
Bowel cancer
Bowel Cancer, if diagnosed early, has a 90% success rate of treatment. This goes to show how important it is to utilise the screening tests offered to you.
People aged 55 and over can be invited to have a flexible sigmoidoscopy. This is a one off test that involves having a thin tube inserted in the bowel to look for any abnormalities and, if necessary, remove small samples of the bowel wall to send for further testing.
Men and women aged 60-74 receive home testing kits every two years in the post. These collect your faeces and test for signs of blood which is a common indicator of bowel cancer. The NHS aims, in the long term, to lower the bowel screening age to 50 years old.
Book online with a nurse or call reception if you receive an invite or feel you are due a screen.
NHS: Bowel cancer
Website
NHS: Bowel CancerNHS: bowel cancer screening
Website
NHS: Bowel Screening