Be Clear on Cancer- Blood in Pee National Campaign

‘If you notice blood in your pee, even if it’s ‘just the once’, tell your doctor’

Each year, around 17,450 people in England are diagnosed with bladder or kidney cancer and approximately 7,600 die from these cancers. If bladder and kidney cancers are diagnosed at the earliest stage, one year survival is as high as 92-96%, at a late stage it drops to just 27-37%.

This campaign follows on from two previous national campaigns that took place in October 2013 and October 2014.

Results to date show improved public awareness. The October 2014 campaign highlighted the following;

  • 6/10 people who were aware of the cancer advertising spontaneously mentioned ‘blood in pee’ as a cancer symptom (62% increase from 31% pre campaign)
  • There was a 34% increase in the number of urgent GP referrals for suspected urological cancers when comparing October-December 2014 to October-December 2012.

 What impact will this have on services?

Following the 2014 campaign, Trusts saw an average increase of six urgent GP referrals for suspected urological cancers per week. The peak of referrals took place two months after the campaign activity started.

Further information can be obtained from the campaign briefing sheet which can be found here https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/sites/default/files/cruk_bcoc16_bipover_0.pdf

Your support is vital to earlier diagnosis of cancer

  1. Talk about the campaign – It may prompt people who have previously ignored blood in their urine to make an appointment with their doctor.
  2. Make the most of available support – The NICE Suspected Cancer: Recognition and Referral guidance was published in June 2015 and can be found here https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng12.
  3. Encourage your colleagues to support the campaign – Ensure everyone is aware of the campaign so they can support it. There are separate briefing sheets for nurses, practice teams, pharmacy teams, local authorities and community partners here https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/health-professional/early-diagnosis-activities/be-clear-on-cancer/blood-in-pee-campaign/resources-and-tools.
  4. Promote the campaign – Put up the poster and display the leaflets in your workplace. You can order more leaflets via the website https://campaignresources.phe.gov.uk/resources/campaigns/43-blood-in-pee/overview or call 0300 123 1002.

If you want to know more about the campaign or about early detection of cancer contact: SECSU.tcstlondon@nhs.net.

Last updated : 16 Mar 2016

 

Medical records one-off payment (19 Jul 2017)

Practices should have received a £250 payment alongside their contractual payment by the end of June 2017. If you have not received this payment or you have any queries relating...
Read more »

Violent patients – a step-by-step guide to safeguarding staff (19 Jul 2017)

After a mental health inpatient made a death threat against a GP in a London practice. Londonwide LMCs' medical director Dr Vicky Weeks shares the advice she gave the team....
Read more »

Premises update July 2017 (18 Jul 2017)

This month’s update include advice on:  London policy for accessing financial support for service charges and premises running costs How to plan a premises relocation Lease negotiations Transitional funding...
Read more »

Vacancies on BMA committees (18 Jul 2017)

There are vacancies on the following:   Armed forces committee Civil and public services committee Private practice committee Forensic and secure environments committee Committee of medical managers  ...
Read more »

Flu campaign preparation and best practice (18 Jul 2017)

Ellie Roberts, a practice manager on secondment to Londonwide LMCs, looks at why practices need to bite the bullet and get started on their flu campaign now. The flu campaign...
Read more »

Ballot on willingness to consider closing lists as industrial action (18 Jul 2017)

At May’s LMC conference the following motion by Tower Hamlets LMC was passed: That conference believes that the GP Forward View is failing to deliver the resources necessary to sustain...
Read more »

Locum and salaried GP handbooks (18 Jul 2017)

The locum GP handbook provides advice and guidance on all aspects of locum work, including on starting out as a locum, setting up as a business and establishing a contract for...
Read more »

New primary-secondary care interface guidance (18 Jul 2017)

GPC (England) has produced new guidance on the interface between primary and secondary care in collaboration with NHS England, NHS Improvement, NHS Clinical Commissioners, Royal College of General Practitioners, Royal...
Read more »

CCG proposals for GPs to restrict access to OTC prescriptions (18 Jul 2017)

This page has been updated to remove advice which stated schemes proposed by Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) which involve GPs assessing patients’ ability to pay for over-the-counter medicines and asking...
Read more »
Next Page »
« Previous Page