East on the Move Conference Tuesday 30th June, 2015 Jo Foster - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

east on the move conference tuesday 30th june 2015
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East on the Move Conference Tuesday 30th June, 2015 Jo Foster - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

East on the Move Conference Tuesday 30th June, 2015 Jo Foster Physical Activity Programme Lead Sarah Worbey Physical Activity Integration Manager physicalactivity@macmillan.org.uk @MacMoveMore Two million of the 2.5 million UKs cancer


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Jo Foster Physical Activity Programme Lead Sarah Worbey Physical Activity Integration Manager physicalactivity@macmillan.org.uk @MacMoveMore

East on the Move Conference Tuesday 30th June, 2015

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Two million of the 2.5 million UK’s cancer population live in England

1.Maddams J, Utley M, Møller H. Projections of cancer prevalence in the United Kingdom, 2010-2040. Br J Cancer. 2012.107:1195-1202. (Projections scenario 1) 2.The UK 2012 incidence rates for five-year age groups.

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Total Prevalence - now Total Prevalence - 2030

Maddams J, Utley M, Moller H. Projections of cancer prevalence in the United Kingdom, 2010-2040. Br J Cancer. 2012. 107: 1195-1202.

Half of people with cancer may live more than ten years after their diagnosis

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3 in 4 people living with cancer are in the survivorship stage1 1 in 4 of them deal with consequences

  • f their treatment2

1 in 5 of cancer survivors may have unmet needs3

Surviving cancer does not necessarily mean living well

1.Maher J and McConnell H. New pathways of care for cancer survivors: adding the numbers. Br J Cancer. 2011. 105: S5-S10 2.Macmillan Cancer Support. Throwing light on the consequences of cancer and its treatment. 2013. London 3.Armes J et al. Patients’ supportive care needs beyond the end of treatment: A prospective, longitudinal survey. Journal of Clinical Oncology.2009. 27:36 6172-6179

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Bowel dysfunction Bladder dysfunction Sexual difficulties Fatigue Pain Lymphoedema Hormonal symptoms 90,000 150,000 350,000 350,000 200,000 <63,000 >80,000

Significant numbers struggle with the consequences of treatment years after diagnosis

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Financial needs2 83%

Cancer affects all areas of people’s lives

Loneliness1 23%

1.Macmillan Cancer Support. Facing the fight alone. Isolation among cancer patients. 2013. London 2.Macmillan Cancer Support. Hidden at home. 2015. London 3.De Boer et al. Cancer survivors and unemployment: a meta-analysis and meta-regression. JAMA. 2009. 301: 753-762

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Carers also have significant unmet needs

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Pressures on clinical and social care systems will increasingly be shaped by co-morbidities

Scottish School of Primary Care’s Multimorbidity Research Programme. Multimorbidity in Scotland. 2012.

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Seven in ten people with cancer have at least one

  • ther long term condition – that’s 1.8 million people

1 LTC 2 LTCs 3+ LTCs No long-term conditions (LTCs) 0.6M 0.5M

Mid-2014 1.8M

Macmillan Cancer Support. Cancer in the context of other long-term conditions. Scoping evidence review and secondary data analysis. 2015.

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Cancer often co-exists with a wide range of other conditions

People living with cancer in the UK in mid-2014

Obesity 31% Mental health issues 21% Chronic Heart Disease 19% Arthritis 16% Chronic Kidney Disease 17% Diabetes

14%

Hypertension 42%

Macmillan Cancer Support. Cancer in the context of other long-term conditions. Scoping evidence review and secondary data analysis. 2015.

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By 2030 the number of people with cancer and at least

  • ne other LTC will increase by around 1 million

1 LTC 2 LTCs 3+ LTCs

Mid-2014 2030 0.7 M 1.3 M 0.6 M 0.5 M 0.9 M 0.8 M

Macmillan Cancer Support. Cancer in the context of other long-term conditions. Scoping evidence review and secondary data analysis. 2015.

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Different people will need different levels of support

70,000 21%

Do well

Estimated prevalence Estimated incidence

Poor health Intermediate

95,000 29% 127,000 38% 460,000 22% 1,170,000 56% 180,000 9%

0% 100%

Pancreas Colorectal - Dukes D Mesothelioma Liver Lung Oesophagus Stomach Brain Distant breast cancer Metastatic prostate Cervix - Stage 2-4 Myeloma Ovary Colorectal - Dukes C Kidney - Stage 2-4 Uterus - Stage 2-4 Bladder Non-Hodgkin lymphoma Colorectal - Dukes A and B Hodgkin lymphoma Uterus - Stage 1 Melanoma of skin Cervix - Stage 1 Localised or regional breast cancer Kidney - Stage 1 T esticular Organ confined prostate Relative five-year survival

McConnell H, White R, Maher J. Understanding variations: Outcomes for people diagnosed with cancer and implications for service provision. 2014. European Network of Cancer Registries Scientific Meeting and General Assembly

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We know what good looks like

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There are some simple solutions

Macmillan Cancer Support. 2011. The importance of physical activity for people living with and beyond cancer: A concise evidence review

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  • Went live January 2015
  • Lincolnshire Sport are the

host organisation

  • Countywide service
  • Embedded within the

existing physical activity

  • ffer across Lincolnshire
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  • Close working relationship between partners
  • Increasing the ‘menu’ of activities available to

people on the project

  • Contacts with NGB’s
  • Raising awareness/profile of programme

across BME groups

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physicalactivity@macmillan.org.uk @MacMoveMore