As Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Breast Cancer, Annette Brooke, MP for Mid Dorset and North Poole, has joined forces with the UK's leading breast cancer charity, Breakthrough Breast Cancer, and the All Party Parliamentary Group on Breast Cancer by signing up to the charity's Screening Saves Lives campaign. She is calling on the Government to ensure the NHS Breast Screening programme in Mid Dorset and North Poole is adequately resourced as the number of women entitled to this potentially life-saving service rises.
MPs attending the Group's annual reception, held jointly with Breakthrough Breast Cancer at Westminster, heard that the NHS Breast Screening Programme is estimated to save around 1,400 lives each year in England alone and gives women the best possible chance of survival by detecting cancer early.
However, this essential service is likely to face increased demand in the future, as more and more women born in the post-war 'baby boom' reach their 50th birthdays and as a result, become eligible for routine breast screening. Currently, all women aged 50-70 are invited to routine breast screening appointments every three years and the Government expects this group to grow by 20%, in England, between 2005 and 2025.
Annette Brooke, MP for Mid Dorset and North Poole, said:
"I am delighted to continue my support for Breakthrough Breast Cancer's Screening Saves Lives campaign.
"Breast cancer is the most common cancer in UK women, with nearly 44,000 women diagnosed each year. The earlier breast cancer is detected, the better the chances of successful treatment and the NHS Breast Screening Programme has been instrumental in ensuring more women than ever are surviving a disease that will affect one in nine women in their lifetime.
"The number of women eligible for breast screening is set to grow over the coming years. However, if the screening service is to continue its vital and life-saving work, it's essential that the Government and Mid Dorset and North Poole Strategic Health Authorities ensures there is capacity to deal with the projected increased demand."
Jeremy Hughes, Chief Executive of Breakthrough Breast Cancer, said:
"Breakthrough Breast Cancer launched Screening Saves Lives last year and since then has been campaigning hard to support and improve the work of the NHS Breast Screening Programme. We are delighted that, in the twelve months since the campaign was launched, parliamentary support has continued to grow.
"The NHS Breast Screening Programme offers an unmatched service which enables breast cancers to be detected before they can be seen or felt by hand. But with the predicted rise in the number of women accessing the programme it is vital that its high standards are maintained and that the Government ensures that the Screening Programme has the resources it needs to meet the demographic challenge ahead."
ENDS
Notes to editors
1. Annette's best friend Patsy Calton MP, who died in June 2005 had suffered from breast cancer and just very recently Susan Mason, a former Mayoress of Poole also good friend of Annette 's has died, and she also had suffered from breast cancer .
2. Breakthrough Breast Cancer is a charity committed to fighting breast cancer through research and education and has established the UK's first dedicated breast cancer research centre. The Breakthrough Toby Robins Breast Cancer Research Centre is situated at the Institute of Cancer Research.
Breakthrough promotes education and awareness of breast cancer amongst the public, policy makers, health professionals and the media. For further information about Breakthrough or breast cancer visit www.breakthrough.org.uk or call the charity's free telephone number on 08080 100 200.
3. Breast screening is when a mammogram (a type of x-ray) is taken of the breasts that can reveal abnormalities such as a tumour, inside the breast.
Since 1988 all UK women aged between 50-64 have been invited for breast screening every three years. The age range was increased to include women up to the age of 70 in 2004 in England and 2006 in Wales. In Northern Ireland women aged 50-64 are invited to be screened every three years. In Scotland women aged 50-70 are invited every three years.
Annette Brooke MP pledges her support
Once a woman reaches the upper age limit for routine invitations for breast screening, they can make their own appointments via their GPs or at a screening unit.
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