16 episodios

From chemotherapy appointments to artificial intelligence, we explore the stories from the people affected by cancer and find out about the cutting-edge research unravelling its mysteries.
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That Cancer Conversation Cancer Research UK

    • Ciencias

From chemotherapy appointments to artificial intelligence, we explore the stories from the people affected by cancer and find out about the cutting-edge research unravelling its mysteries.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Longer, better lives: Ep.2 Why did a doctor have to wait for cancer treatment?

    Longer, better lives: Ep.2 Why did a doctor have to wait for cancer treatment?

    We’re back with another episode of our subseries, Longer, better lives! This series unpacks our recently published manifesto, Longer, Better Lives: A Manifesto for Cancer Research and Care.    
    You might recognise our next guest, as she was part of our ‘Together We Are Beating Cancer’ campaign featuring on a TV advert as well as billboards and posters on display across the UK, during September.  
    Dr Mei-Ling Lancashire is a GP who was diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer 2 years ago. In this episode, Sophie sits with Mei-Ling to talk about her cancer experience and why she believes politicians need to start prioritising cancer.   
    To join us in telling party leaders to back our calls for longer, better lives, you can sign our open letter.   
    Read the manifesto
    Sign our open letter
    Sign up to be a Campaigns Ambassador
    For more cancer stories, visit Cancer News

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    • 16 min
    What's causing the cancer care gap?

    What's causing the cancer care gap?

    We’ve made huge progress on cancer in the last 50 years. 
    But not all of it has been felt equally. People’s experience of the healthcare system, and ultimately how likely they are to be successfully diagnosed and treated, varies massively. These are known as health inequalities and can be caused by a range of factors. 
    In this episode of That Cancer Conversation, we’re exploring how deprivation impacts cancer inequalities and what we can do to narrow the gap. 
    We speak to Cancer Research advocate and public health manager for Luton, Elizabeth Bailey, the lead researcher of the Inequalities Cancer Outcome Network programme, Professor Bernard Rachet and Julia Cotterill, a health information officer here at Cancer Research UK.  
     
    Find out more about World Cancer Day:  
    https://www.worldcancerday.org/close-care-gap https://news.cancerresearchuk.org/2024/02/02/world-cancer-day-2024/ Find out more about ICON and their work 
    Read more about health inequalities  
     
    For more cancer stories, visit Cancer News  

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    • 36 min
    Longer, better lives: Ep.1 What is Cancer Research UK's manifesto?

    Longer, better lives: Ep.1 What is Cancer Research UK's manifesto?

    Welcome to another episode of That Cancer Conversation! We’re launching a new subseries which unpacks our recently published manifesto, Longer, Better Lives: A Manifesto for Cancer Research and Care.
    At Cancer Research UK, we know that huge strides have been made in beating cancer – with survival in the UK doubling over the last 50 years.   
    But this hard-won progress is at risk of stalling.   
    The cancer crisis is urgent. Every day, people affected by cancer face anxious waits for tests and treatment, reflected in month after month of missed cancer waiting time targets. And for UK cancer research, we’ve identified a funding gap of more than £1bn in the next decade, putting our world leading research at risk. 
    That’s why, in late 2023, we embarked on an ambitious policy development programme, giving a voice to the millions of patients and thousands of researchers who are demanding for real progress in cancer research and care in the UK. 
    And so, Longer, better lives was born.  
    Follow Sophie over the next five episodes as she uncovers the missions behind this manifesto and why we need it now more than ever. 
    In this first episode, Sophie speaks to Shaun Walsh, Head of public affairs and campaigns at Cancer Research UK. Shaun has followed the manifesto’s journey, from conception to its launch in November, and explains what it is and why Cancer Research UK has created it. 
    Read the manifesto
    Sign our open letter
    Sign up to be a Campaigns Ambassador
    For more cancer stories, visit Cancer News

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 13 min
    The world of clinical trials

    The world of clinical trials

    Clinical trials are a vital step in the development of new medicines of any kind, and that includes new cancer treatments. They aim to find out whether new treatments are safe and effective and work better than current treatments. 
    In this episode of That Cancer Conversation, we're going to take you into the world of clinical research and walk you through the pathway, from how we design trials in the first place, right through to taking part, to give you the full picture of what a clinical trial really involves. 
    We spoke to Ruth Plummer, professor of experimental cancer medicine at the University of Newcastle, Karen Turner, a senior research nurse at the University of Birmingham, and Peter, who took part in the Cancer Research UK-funded CHHiP trial after being diagnosed with prostate cancer. 
    Learn more about the topic: 
    What are clinical trials? Find a clinical trial CHHiP Our senior research nurses 
    If you’d like to talk to someone, our nurses are available Monday to Friday 9-5pm on freephone 0808 800 4040. 
    For more news about all things cancer, check out Cancer News
    And if you have a question you’d like us to answer or topic you want us to explore, you can send an email to sciencesurgery@cancer.org.uk and tell us about your idea! 

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    • 39 min
    How does cancer affect a family?

    How does cancer affect a family?

    Our latest podcast is about how families cope with cancer, and the scientific progress helping them through.
    Austin was diagnosed with a type of blood cancer called acute lymphoblastic leukaemia when he was 2 years old.
    In 2016, scientists took some cells from Austin’s immune system. Dr Sara Ghorashian, from the Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, changed them so they could recognise cancer cells as a threat. Then they were put back into Austin’s body. 
    Since then, Austin has been cancer free. Now he’s even helping researchers find out how to make CAR-T cell therapy more effective.  
    Lou and Scott take us through Austin’s story, and Sara guides us through the science that has helped keep it going. We also speak to Caroline Leek, a former scientist who specialises in supporting families affected by cancer, about how focusing on fun can help adults and children talk about painful and emotional experiences. 
    Learn more about the resources discussed: 
    About Cancer - Children’s cancer Fruit Fly Collective CARPALL trial Echo Games 
    For more cancer stories, check out Cancer News!
    And if you have a question you’d like us to answer or topic you want us to explore, you can send an email to sciencesurgery@cancer.org.uk and tell us about your idea! 

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 35 min
    One to one with Dr Laura Danielson

    One to one with Dr Laura Danielson

    In our new podcast series, That Cancer Conversation: One to One, we’re talking to the people who make Cancer Research UK what it is. 
    September is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month and in this first episode we’re hearing from Dr Laura Danielson, our research lead for children’s and young people’s cancer.  
    Laura moved across the Atlantic to make sure her work had the best chance of helping patients. And, since arriving in the UK, she’s gone from testing a neuroblastoma treatment as one of our funded researchers to managing our entire research strategy for children’s and young people’s cancers. 
    Here she takes us through everything she’s learned along the way, explaining how the people she’s met and the challenges she’s faced continue to drive her, and reflecting on what it means to work for a future where all children and young people can live longer, better lives, free from the fear of cancer. 
    Learn more about the resources discussed: 
    Cancer Research UK for children and young people About Cancer – Children’s cancers 
    For more cancer stories, check out Cancer News!
    If you’d like to talk to someone, our nurses are available Monday to Friday 9-5pm on freephone 0808 800 4040. 
    And if you have a question you’d like us to answer or topic you want us to explore, you can send an email to sciencesurgery@cancer.org.uk and tell us about your idea! 

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 15 min

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