logo
Former Northwich athlete quit smoking after lung cancer diagnosis

Former Northwich athlete quit smoking after lung cancer diagnosis

BBC News12-03-2025

A former athlete diagnosed with lung cancer has praised hospital staff for helping him beat a 50-year smoking addiction.Shaun Webb, 61, was selected to represent Great Britain at jujitsu in his twenties, despite smoking 80 to 90 cigarettes a week.After he started coughing up blood last year, the sports enthusiast was admitted to Leighton Hospital in Crewe, Cheshire, where he was diagnosed.He had surgery to remove a lump in his lung in July 2024 and, as part of his ongoing treatment, has been able to ditch his smoking habit with the hospital's help.
Mr Webb, from Northwich, said he had been smoking since he was eight years old and never thought "in his wildest dreams" he would be able to stop.A keen bodybuilder, cyclist and waterskier in his 20s, he was selected to represent his national jujitsu squad at 27."Who knows what I could have been like if I didn't smoke," he said. "I was a really big athlete back in the day and I always pushed myself."It was not long before his smoking habit began to affect his fitness."My breathing was terrible and I probably had the lungs of a 90-year-old by the time I was in my 40s," he said.
'Game changer'
When he was readmitted to hospital with a chest infection a few months after his operation, Mr Webb met a specialist from the Mid Cheshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust's Cure team, which helps patients to give up smoking.He signed up for the programme and managed to completely ditch his habit, with the aid of patches and vapes."The big health benefit for me is sleep, because I couldn't sleep very well before," he said."After I stopped smoking, the coughing and the waking up from coughing just about stopped within two months... It was a game changer for me."He also said he was "grateful" to still be alive to attend his daughter's wedding in August.Jo Harding, a specialist nurse from the Cure programme, said smoking was the single largest preventable cause of death in the country."I'm so happy we were able to make such a difference for Shaun. Quitting is the best thing any smoker can do for their health and it's never too late to stop," she said.
Follow BBC Stoke & Staffordshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stafford County Hospital opens new day-case surgery hub
Stafford County Hospital opens new day-case surgery hub

BBC News

time2 days ago

  • BBC News

Stafford County Hospital opens new day-case surgery hub

A new £9.8m unit for day cases has officially opened at a hospital in Hospitals of North Midlands NHS Trust (UHNM) launched the unit at County Hospital in Stafford to tackle waiting list said it would offer thousands of patients quicker access to day-case unit has a dedicated space for patients who need colorectal, upper gastroenterology, orthopaedic or ear, nose and throat surgery, freeing up more space in main theatres. It follows the recent opening of the Staffordshire Treatment Suite and North Midlands Hand Centre, also both based at County hubs are part of NHS bosses' plans to increase surgical capacity and offer quicker access to some of the most common procedures. Bosses said the day-case unit was the latest stage in turning the hospital into an "elective-hub" for patients to be seen quicker at the site most suited to their unit has almost doubled capacity from the existing 15 beds on Ward 8 to 28."By further improving and extending our surgical facilities at County Hospital, we will be able to offer thousands of patients each year with quicker access to day-case surgery, helping to improve their quality of life whilst reducing waiting lists," said UHNM chief executive Dr Simon Constable. Follow BBC Stoke & Staffordshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Major HIV breakthrough forces hidden fragments of the virus to emerge so it can be cleared from the body
Major HIV breakthrough forces hidden fragments of the virus to emerge so it can be cleared from the body

Daily Mail​

time2 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Major HIV breakthrough forces hidden fragments of the virus to emerge so it can be cleared from the body

Experts could have found a way to be one step closer to curing HIV for good. Researchers in Australia has developed a new treatment that forces hidden fragments of the virus - normally concealed within human cells - to emerge and expose themselves to the immune system. The breakthrough could enable the body, aided by antiviral drugs, to detect and destroy any lingering viral reservoirs. HIV has remained incurable because the virus can integrate itself into a cell's DNA, laying dormant and undetectable to both medication and immune defenses. Scientists said they've created a nanoparticle capable of delivering genetic instructions to infected cells, prompting them to produce a signal that reveals the virus's presence. Dr Paula Cevaal of the Doherty Institute and co-author of the study told The Guardian that the feat was 'previously thought impossible'. Cevaal said: 'In the field of biomedicine, many things eventually don't make it into the clinic, that is the unfortunate truth; I don't want to paint a prettier picture than what is the reality. 'But in terms of specifically the field of HIV cure, we have never seen anything close to as good as what we are seeing, in terms of how well we are able to reveal this virus. 'So, from that point of view, we're very hopeful that we are also able to see this type of response in an animal, and that we could eventually do this in humans.' The discovery was first revealed in the journal Nature Communications, where researchers said they were initially so astonished that they had to rerun the tests. Further research would be needed to determine whether revealing the virus would be enough to trigger an immune response, with tests only being carried out in the lab. It could still take years before clinical trials for the drug began, when it would have to go through rigorous testing before reaching consumers. However, the advance represents another step forward for the 1.2 million Americans currently living with an HIV infection - for which they took drugs daily. An estimated 31,800 people were believed to be infected every year, although that's a 12 per cent decline on five years ago. Globally, nearly 40 million people have the virus. The new nanoparticle's based on mRNA technology, the same as was used in covid vaccines made by Pfizer and other vaccine manufacturers. In their paper, the scientists revealed that they could deliver mRNA instructions to cells using the nanoparticle. The mRNA then instruct cells to generate substances that reveal the presence of HIV, but only if the virus was present. The study done in the laboratory was carried out in cells donated by HIV patients.

Doctors make breakthrough in HIV cure search: 'We've never seen anything close to as good'
Doctors make breakthrough in HIV cure search: 'We've never seen anything close to as good'

Daily Mail​

time3 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Doctors make breakthrough in HIV cure search: 'We've never seen anything close to as good'

Experts may have moved one step closer to curing HIV for good. Researchers in Australia have developed a new treatment that forces hidden fragments of the virus — normally concealed within human cells — to emerge and expose themselves to the immune system. The breakthrough could enable the body, aided by antiviral drugs, to detect and destroy these lingering viral reservoirs. HIV has remained incurable because the virus can integrate itself into a cell's DNA, lying dormant and undetectable to both medication and immune defenses. But the scientists say they have created a nanoparticle capable of delivering genetic instructions to infected cells, prompting them to produce a signal that reveals the virus's presence. Dr Paula Cevaal, research fellow at the Doherty Institute and co-author of the study, told the Guardian that this feat was 'previously thought impossible'. 'In the field of biomedicine, many things eventually don't make it into the clinic,' she said, 'that is the unfortunate truth; I don't want to paint a prettier picture than what is the reality'. 'But in terms of specifically the field of HIV cure, we have never seen anything close to as good as what we are seeing, in terms of how well we are able to reveal this virus. 'So, from that point of view, we're very hopeful that we are also able to see this type of response in an animal, and that we could eventually do this in humans.' The discovery was first revealed in the journal Nature Communications, with researchers saying they were initially so astonished that they had to re-run the tests. Further research will be needed to determine whether revealing the virus is enough to trigger an immune response, with the tests only being carried out in the lab. And it could still take years before clinical trials for the drug begin, when it would have to go through rigorous testing before reaching consumers. But the advance represents another step forward for the 1.2million Americans currently living with an HIV infection — for which they must take drugs daily. An estimated 31,800 people are infected every year, although this is a 12 percent decline on five years ago. Globally, nearly 40million people have the virus. The nanoparticle is based on mRNA technology, the same that was used in the Covid vaccines made by Pfizer and other vaccine manufacturers. In their paper, the scientists revealed that they could deliver mRNA instructions to cells using the nanoparticle. This mRNA then instructs cells to generate substances that reveal the presence of HIV, but only if the virus is present. The study was done in the lab, and carried out in cells donated by HIV patients. It comes after the Trump administration was reported to have cut funding for research into a potential HIV vaccine. The termination of the $258million research program stunned scientists at Duke University and Scripps Research Institute behind the project. HIV disproportionately affects gay and bisexual individuals in the US, who account for an estimated 67 percent of new infections — according to 2022 data. People who acquire HIV through heterosexual sex made up 22 percent of new diagnoses, or 8,495 cases, while those who were diagnosed after injecting drugs made up seven percent of new diagnoses, or 2,650 cases.

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