|
The EDP Breast Cancer Appeal, launched
in November 2003, raised £200,000 to create a
special unit at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, King's
Lynn.
In 10 months - at the rate of £4700
a week - your donations have helped transform facilities
for thousands of women facing the trauma of breast cancer.
This was the situation at the start of
the appeal:
Breast cancer facilities at the Queen
Elizabeth are spread around the site and too cramped
for the rapidly growing number of patients who use them.
Anxious patients have to share a waiting room; there
is no counselling area near the consultants rooms
and conditions are desperately cramped, hot and uncomfortable.
At the moment theres no spare capacity
within the Breast Cancer Department so if we have a
busy day or a patient falls unwell, there is nowhere
they can go to recover, said consultant radiologist
Geoff Hunnam. Between the different stages of
the process, patients currently have to pass through
many different wards to reach the facilities, which
can be extremely distressing.
Although the length of waiting lists are not dissimilar
to those nationally, in 2002, the Queen Elizabeth Hospital
breast cancer unit saw 1636 new patients with 187 diagnosed
with Breast Cancer. A 5% increase is expected each year
and referrals have doubled in the past eight years,
a further indication that suitable facilities are vital.
Space has already been identified for a dedicated,
purpose-built unit at the hospital. It will have three
new consulting rooms, a counselling area, waiting room,
separate X-ray facilities and changing rooms.
Once it opens the whole process from screening through
diagnosis, counselling and treatment will be faster
and less traumatic for thousands of patients. Without
this appeal, those patients would have had to endure
years of difficult conditions before the unit would
have been considered for funding.
The appeal was launched on November 14, 2003, with
the aim of starting work within 18 months.
Appeal supporters
Among those who have backed the appeal
is actress Claire Goose, radio presenter Becky Jago
and Anglia TV's Becky Mantin.
In backing the appeal, Casualty actress Claire, who
is a West Norfolk GPs daughter, has told of her
own scare when she discovered lumps which eventually
proved to be negative. Having experienced something
similar myself, I can understand how important it will
be to have this unit set up, she said. Having
the practical and compassionate help under one roof
is absolutely vital.
Becky Jago (Anglia TV, BBC Newsround, Capital Radio)
lost her mother to the disease, at the age of just 54.
I am very proud to be associated with this campaign
and Im pleased that the EDP has picked up on the
need of thousands of women in this area, she said.
I hope the people of East Anglia get behind it
and raise the £200,000.
The EDPs appeal partners are Rotary clubs across
the region, as well as radio station KLFM 96.7 and the
Norwich & Peterborough Building Society who are
kindly enabling people to pay into the fund at their
offices.
Matthew Bullock, chief executive of Norwich and Peterborough
Building Society said: "We're delighted to be supporting
the EDP with this very worthwhile appeal. As a local,
mutual building society we feel it is very important
to support those in the communities where we have branches.
A dedicated breast cancer unit at King's Lynn hospital
will be invaluable to women in the area who are affected
by the disease and to their families and loved ones."
EDP Editor Peter Franzen asks all readers to support
the appeal: This fund will give the hospital the
kind of unit which is already standard in all other
main hospitals in the region.
Breast Cancer patients in West Norfolk surely
deserve the kind of facilities and care, which the new
unit will provide. Please help us to help them.
|