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 - - 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
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
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.
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
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
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
6
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
Carers also have significant unmet needs
15
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
We know what good looks like
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
- Went live January 2015
- Lincolnshire Sport are the
host organisation
- Countywide service
- Embedded within the
existing physical activity
- ffer across Lincolnshire
- 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