logo
UK cancer patients being denied life-saving drugs due to Brexit

UK cancer patients being denied life-saving drugs due to Brexit

The National21-04-2025

The numbers of people being diagnosed with cancer are soaring due to an ageing and growing population as well as improved diagnosis initiatives.
But a 54-page report obtained by The Guardian has concluded that while patients across Europe are benefitting from a golden age of pioneering research, people in the UK are missing out thanks to rising prices and red tape sparked by the country's exit from the EU.
Brexit has 'damaged the practical ability' of doctors to offer NHS patients life-saving new drugs via international clinical trials, the report states.
In some cases, the cost of importing new cancer drugs for UK patients has nearly quadrupled as a result of post-Brexit red tape.
READ MORE: Trans people not asked for ID at Edinburgh Waverley station, Network Rail says
The report says the extra rules and costs have had a 'significant negative impact' on UK cancer research, creating 'new barriers' that are 'holding back life-saving research' for UK patients.
Officials in the Cabinet Office and the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology are reportedly studying the findings of the review.
The publication cites evidence from a range of leading clinicians, scientists and researchers, and was compiled by experts from organisations including Cancer Research UK, the University of Southampton, and research consultancy Hatch.
Three areas of UK cancer research have been hit particularly hard by its departure from the EU, according to the report. They are the regulatory environment for clinical trials, the mobility of the cancer research workforce and access to research funding and collaboration.
UK patients are missing out on the expertise of the world's top cancer scientists, while clinical trial groups and universities are struggling to attract 'global talent' in cancer research to come to the UK.
The report also reveals the UK is needlessly duplicating drug testing in clinical trials involving the UK and EU, with extra checks causing potentially deadly delays.
In one case, the UK had to spend an extra £22,000 for an official to certify batches of aspirin for use in a cancer trial. The batches had already been checked in the EU.
READ MORE: SNP suspend by-election campaigning after death of Pope
UK researchers are finding it 'more difficult' too to attract grant funding to explore new ways to save the lives of patients 'due to additional bureaucracy since the UK left the EU'.
Brexit is also having a wider, damaging effect on life-saving research in the EU.
The report adds. 'The exclusion of UK researchers from European cancer research activities has had, and will continue to have, negative consequences for the overall European cancer research effort.'
Mark Dayan, the Brexit programme lead at the health think tank Nuffield Trust, said the report highlighted 'concrete examples' of 'disruptions which many warned were inevitable from the moment that we left the EU with a relatively hard Brexit for health and research'.
The UK and EU are due to renew the trade and cooperation agreement this year and discuss a wider reset which will shape the future UK-EU relationship.
A UK Government spokesperson said: 'We are strengthening our relationship with the EU on research and have been providing extensive support for researchers to help them secure funding from the £80bn Horizon Europe programme and get more vital treatments from the lab to patients.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A year's wait to get a tooth removed on the NHS: Mum pays £250 for son's private care - and criticises public services
A year's wait to get a tooth removed on the NHS: Mum pays £250 for son's private care - and criticises public services

Sky News

time28 minutes ago

  • Sky News

A year's wait to get a tooth removed on the NHS: Mum pays £250 for son's private care - and criticises public services

Three-year-old Eddie laughs as he whizzes down a slide. His mother Jodie Poole is relieved to see him smiling. A few weeks ago, he developed a painful abscess in his mouth. After being told there'd be up to a year's wait for the NHS to remove the affected tooth, Jodie paid around £250 for it to be done privately. An example, she says, of how public services are letting down families like hers. "I feel like I'm paying twice," she says. "I'm paying through my taxes, the money that I should be paying, and then I'm paying extra money that looks quite expensive because I can't get the things that we need that we should do for our taxes." As Chancellor Rachel Reeves decides how much to fund each of the public services that people across the country rely on for their everyday needs, it's people like Jodie who'll need persuading that they're getting a return for their taxes. There'll be winners and losers, with health and defence set to be prioritised. Jodie works as a childminder and runs a mother and toddler group in Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, which is where we met her for a chat. She voted for Labour at the last general election but has been disappointed so far. "I don't think Britain's working well for anyone right now," is her verdict on the state of public services. 'I don't think they have a clue' Running around with the younger children is seven-year-old LJ. It's the middle of the school day, but her mother Rachel Lawrence, 46, explains she no longer attends school due to concerns her additional needs weren't being met. She believes funding for education needs to be prioritised. "My daughter's home educated because they can't keep up with the SEN (special educational needs) needs of children," she says. Rachel used to work in a care home but had to give up due to childcare demands. She now works three jobs to pay the bills. She can't remember exactly how long LJ has been on a waiting list for an autism assessment but says it's been "years". As well as schools, she wants her taxes to be spend on extra funding for the NHS and more money for the police. "I think they seem to be very underfunded as well," she says. "Here, there's thefts all the time." She believes government ministers are out of touch with what life is really like. "I don't think they have a clue," she says. "They're too high up to kind of see what's happening to what I would call us little people down here". Hard to book appointments with GP In a nearby cafe, Eddie Bromley, 72, is enjoying a morning coffee. Asked if he's happy with local services, he shakes his head. "You can't ring your doctor up now and say, 'Can I book an appointment?'" he says. He dislikes being told to book online. "For a lot of people, you know, that's difficult," he says. Local pharmacist, Kishore Banda says inability to book GP appointments when they're needed is the biggest complaint he hears from customers. He says people then seek help at A&E departments instead. "At the end of the day it will cost more for the NHS," he says. But among the steady stream of people coming in to collect prescriptions we found people supportive of at least some of what they're hearing from the government. Whitney stops to chat briefly. " I'm quite alright with everything at the moment, obviously that's not the same for everyone," she says. Michael Lamb, who is in his 80s, thinks prioritising defence spending is key. "I can see a third world war coming," he says, genuinely concerned. The chancellor has talked about tough choices when it comes to deciding how to allocate spending. It's clear, here in Peterborough, that it will be impossible to please everyone.

Kate Garraway's 'tsunami of sadness' as grieving host shares heartbreaking habit
Kate Garraway's 'tsunami of sadness' as grieving host shares heartbreaking habit

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Kate Garraway's 'tsunami of sadness' as grieving host shares heartbreaking habit

Kate Garraway, often a host of Good Morning Britain, looked after her husband Derek Draper, who died in January 2024 following a cardiac arrest after a journey with long COVID Kate Garraway described the "tsunami of sadness" she experiences after she often wakes in the middle of night panicking she hasn't given husband Derek Draper his medicine. The broadcaster, a regular on Good Morning Britain, has detailed the "joys and responsibilities" of being carer in a candid article following Derek's death aged 56 in January 2024. The lobbyist had a lengthy journey with long COVID, during which Kate, 58, became his primary carer. ‌ Kate, who had two children with Derek, held his hands until the very end, she said in a previous interview. In her latest piece, the presenter told how she continues to grieve the psychotherapist, whom she married in 2005. ‌ The mum wrote: "Being a carer, its joys and its responsibilities, stays with you even after you have lost the person. I still wake up in the middle of the night panicking that I haven't given him his medicine, or that I have forgotten to move him every hour to prevent the painful contractions in his limbs. "The next second I realise he no longer needs that care. There is a moment of relief — that I did not let him down — before a tsunami of sadness hits." Nearly 60 per cent of carers struggle to look after their own health, a report by non-profit organisation Carers UK this week shows. Four in ten have cancelled medical appointments to prioritise the person they look after and 1.2million live in poverty, including 400,000 in deep poverty. Kate refers to these figures in her piece for The Sun, stressing her own health suffered during Derek's battle. She experienced a "heart event" in November 2022 on her way into work for Good Morning Britain, and was dashed to hospital. It is likely she will need surgery for her autoimmune thyroid condition. ‌ Kate, originally from Abingdon, Oxfordshire, added: "My autoimmune thyroid condition — neglected during Derek's illness — has now worsened significantly. Surgery now looks likely. It could have been avoided. "During a three-week gap in care, while the system tried to work out which agency should give Derek the life-saving care he needed, I had no choice but to try to get through looking after Derek 24/7 completely alone." Unpaid carers, Kate says, save the country £184billion a year — more than the entire NHS budget. However, the broadcaster argues more needs to be done to support them, and has called on Rachel Reeves, Chancellor of the Exchequer, to consider this when delivering today's spending review. Directing her poignant message at the politician, Kate wrote: "Put them at the heart of your plans. Invest in their health, give them real support and recognise the vital role they play."

Robotic surgeries set to soar under NHS plans
Robotic surgeries set to soar under NHS plans

South Wales Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Robotic surgeries set to soar under NHS plans

In 2023/24, some 70,000 robot-assisted surgeries were carried out in the NHS in England, but the number is expected to rise to around half a million over the next decade. NHS officials said that by 2035, it is expected that nine in 10 of all keyhole surgeries will be delivered with robot assistance – up from one in five at present. Health Secretary Wes Streeting, who had robot-assisted surgery when he had treatment for kidney cancer, said that innovative technologies will 'transform the NHS'. NHS England said that patients who have robotic assisted-surgery tend to recover quicker and are able to leave hospital sooner. Experts said that robotic surgery allows 'greater dexterity and are easier to manipulate' compared to traditional surgery. Surgeons control instruments using a console and a camera. In some othopaedic procedures, robots are programmed to perform elements of procedures. Officials said that the range of robotic-assisted procedures has widened in recent years and spans multiple areas of medicine. Speaking ahead of a speech at the NHS ConfedExpo conference in Manchester, NHS England boss Sir Jim Mackey said: 'The NHS has pledged to return to shorter elective waiting times by 2029 and we are using every tool at our disposal to ensure patients get the best possible treatment. 'Expanding the use of new and exciting tech such as robotic surgery will play a huge part in this. 'Not only does it speed up the number of procedures the NHS can do, but it also means better outcomes, a faster recovery and shorter hospital stays for patients.' Mr Streeting said: 'Innovative treatments and technologies that help fast track better outcomes for patients is how we transform our NHS and make it fit for the future. 'I know myself how important this is, when the NHS saved my life from kidney cancer with an operation led by a world-class surgeon being helped by a robot. 'Whether it's robotic surgery, our new health data research service to accelerate the development of new medicines, or announcing new artificial intelligence that detects skin cancer, our Plan for Change is driving forward new ways to help cut waiting lists and get patients treated on time again.' John McGrath, consultant surgeon at North Bristol NHS Trust and chair of the NHSE Steering Committee for Robotic Assisted Surgery, added: 'Robot-assisted surgery is a perfect example of innovation improving patients' care and transforming the way the NHS works – the number of procedures being carried is set to rapidly grow over the next 10 years according to our analysis. 'As keyhole surgery continues to develop and scale up in the NHS, it is likely that many of these procedures will be provided with degrees of robot assistance in the future. 'Faster recovery and shorter hospital stays are not only hugely important benefits for patients undergoing surgery, if used efficiently they can have a positive impact on the rest of the system by relieving pressure on services and therefore helping to reduce waiting times.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store