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Home African Caribbean NHS Launches Cancer “Bus-Ting” Tour As Double-Decker Bus Aims To Drive Up Awareness Of Deadly Disease

NHS Launches Cancer “Bus-Ting” Tour As Double-Decker Bus Aims To Drive Up Awareness Of Deadly Disease

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NHS launches cancer “bus-ting” tour as double-decker bus aims to drive up awareness of deadly disease 

An NHS double-decker bus will be touring the country from Monday, to help raise awareness of the signs and symptoms of cancer and to encourage people to visit their GP for potentially lifesaving checks if they have a symptom. 

The bus will be taking the below route:

  • Monday 6 February – Blackburn (Town Hall Square 10am-4pm)
  • Tuesday 7 February – Sunderland (Keel Square 10am-1.30pm)
  • Wednesday 8 February – Barnsley (Barnsley Market 10am-4pm)
  • Thursday 9 February – Leicester (Humberstone Gate LE1 1WA 10am-1pm and Peepul Centre 2pm-4pm)
  • Friday 10 February – North-East London (Meridian Square Stratford E15 1AZ 10am-4pm) 

In partnership with Stagecoach, the UK’s largest bus and coach operator, the giant NHS blue bus specifically branded with an eye-catching design, will visit five areas across the country where early diagnosis rates for cancer are among the lowest. 

Kicking off its tour, following World Cancer Day on Saturday, the bus will head to its first stop in Blackburn on Monday 6 February, before moving on to Sunderland, Barnsley, and Leicester and will complete its route in London on Friday 10 February. 

From the bus and Stagecoach driver David Hunt, one of the company’s biggest charity fundraisers, to teams of NHS staff, alongside nurses from Cancer Research UK, will provide expert advice to help make passers-by aware of common cancer signs and symptoms, the importance of earlier diagnosis, and where they can go for support or further advice. 

Part of the health service’s ‘Help Us, Help You’ campaign, the tour is the latest NHS initiative to help drive earlier cancer diagnosis and tackle health inequalities, ultimately improving survival rates. 

Thanks to these awareness-raising campaigns, more people than ever before have had potentially lifesaving NHS cancer checks, with over 2.8 million people seen last year – up by almost a fifth in the same period before the pandemic (2.35 million in 2018/19). 

This has had a direct impact on the number of people diagnosed with cancer – with more than 320,000 people receiving treatment for cancer over the last year (Nov 2021 – Oct 2022) – the highest number on record, and up by more than 8,000 in the same period pre-pandemic. 

The NHS is committed to its long-term plan to diagnose and treat cancers earlier. All GP teams now have direct access to potentially life-saving tests for patients – helping to cut waiting times and speeding up a cancer diagnosis for tens of thousands of patients or the all-clear for many more. 

National Clinical Director for Cancer, Professor Peter Johnson, said: “We have seen a fantastic response to our Help Us, Help You cancer campaigns so far and are already seeing record levels of people coming forward for cancer checks, with thousands more people starting cancer treatment than in previous years. 

“This bus tour is another example of how we are going further in our ambition to diagnose more cancers at an earlier stage than ever before, by engaging directly with people in their own communities as they are going about their daily routines. 

“Trained staff will be on hand to discuss any concerns people may have about cancer symptoms and to inform them on what to look out for. It’s vitally important that people are aware of what is normal for their bodies and that when they notice something isn’t right, they feel empowered to come forward.” 

Dr Aziza Sesay NHS GP said: 

Dr A Sesay

We know that cancers are more likely to be treated successfully if caught at an early stage. Some are even preventable! Knowledge is power and awareness is everything. The NHS Bus-ting cancer tour is such an important way of spreading lifesaving knowledge to the wider community, about potential signs and symptoms of cancer to look out for, so as to encourage individuals to seek help sooner. Being aware of any unexplained changes in your body is crucial too – know your body, do your self-checks – if something doesn’t feel right or you’re worried, please see your Doctor. The NHS is here and we want to see you.” 

After the tour, the bus will continue to operate a normal Stagecoach service in Manchester and will continue to carry the life-saving cancer messaging. 

Carla Stockton-Jones, UK Managing Director for Stagecoach said: “We are really proud to be supporting this great cause and raise more awareness in checking for the early signs of cancer. 

“Our services cover towns and cities right across the UK, so we were delighted to partner with the NHS in getting the message out to local communities. If we can prompt even one person to get checked by their GP, then it’s a worthwhile endeavour for us. 

“Our ‘Giving for Good’ charity committee has supported numerous campaigns and charities throughout the year and it is always a pleasure to see these ideas come to fruition to help more people, including our valued customers and employees.” 

The NHS’s Help Us Help You campaign addresses the stigma and fears surrounding cancer, with recent surveys showing over half (53%) say they worry about cancer every few months or more. 

It is not the first time the NHS has visited communities with lower early diagnosis rates for cancer, having more than doubled the number of community lung truck sites as part of our drive to catch more cancers at stage one or two. 

More than 30,000 people are invited every month for a Lung MOT – with over one thousand (1,300) people diagnosed with lung cancer earlier, and more than three-quarters (77%) caught at either stage one or two. 

Stagecoach has provided gratis use of the bus as part of its ‘Giving for Good’ community initiative, including a driver and the wrap of the bus in NHS England’s chosen design.

The bus will feature a statistic stating ’65 out of 78 passengers on this bus would survive

cancer if caught at the earliest stage’ – this is based on cancer stage 1 5-year survival statistics (83.6%) 

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