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Cancer patients face long trips for treatment



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Published Date: 02 October 2008
CANCER patients in Mid Sussex are having to travel long distances to Guildford, Southampton and Brighton for vital radiotherapy because there is no machine in West Sussex to treat them.

Radiotherapy given through a linear accelerator is an important line of defence against some forms of cancer, yet West Sussex Primary Care Trust, which has been in existence for two years and has a £1billion budget, has only just announced plans to acquire three machines for the county.

A clinical source close to the Royal Sussex County Hospital in Brighton, a specialist cancer centre where there is a radiotherapy machine, said: "We know there are patients who have chosen not to have radiotherapy because they have to travel such a long way from home. Although targets are being met for radiotherapy treatment, the issue is the distances patients have to travel when they feel unwell."

Mid Sussex health campaigner Janice Kent said: "The situation is disgraceful."

Director of the Sussex Cancer Network Deborah Tomalin said a new linear accelerator costs in the region of £1million, adding: "Historically, radiotherapy services have been built up at specialist cancer centres because of the workforce requirements. It needs a skills mix and we have that skills mix at specialist centres in Brighton, Southampton and Guildford.

"Also, there are a variety of cancer treatments and it makes sense to provide these services close together at one centre."

Read the full story in the Mid Sussex Times

What do you think? Send us your views by emailing the paper at middy.news@sussexnewspapers.co.uk, giving your name and road name, or comment online by registering or signing in below

The full article contains 281 words and appears in n/a newspaper.
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  • Last Updated: 02 October 2008 11:02 AM
  • Source: n/a
  • Location: Haywards Heath
 
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Biveran,

Haywards Heath 09/10/2008 15:13:51
I have had the fortune, or misfortune, to receive radiotherapy twice and had to travel to Brighton. The machines are as said, horrendously expensive and I don't think it is too much of an imposition to travel this distance. The local hospitals would need more than one accelerator and many specialist staff as usually three are present in the rooms with each patient. Patients also have to trek to Brighton for chemotherapy but again, in my opinion, it's not too bad, there is a special car park for cancer centre patients, and everyone at the centre is amazing. We do not live in an ideal world and the NHS is not a bottomless pit.
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