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cancer team standing in front of the mobile cancer unit holding the cups which say 'cuppa for cancer'

Gloria Hunniford is heading up a campaign to promote the delivery of localised NHS cancer treatment with the use of mobile cancer care units. Gloria lost her daughter, Caron Keating, to breast cancer in 2004 and is a patron of charity Hope for Tomorrow, which provides the NHS with mobile cancer care units. The charity is launching its ‘Cuppa for Cancer Care’ initiative to coincide with World Cancer Day as an annual event to help fund the service which improves the life of cancer patients across the country.

Gloria said: “Cancer can take a terrible toll on individuals and their families. Travelling for repeated treatment is often difficult, stressful and time-consuming, for so many people. The mobile cancer care units and specialist NHS nurses drive out to patients’ communities rather than them having to travel to hospital. This makes a difficult time that much easier for them.”

Cuppa for Cancer Care takes place from 30 January to 5 February, around World Cancer Day, which is on 4 February 2023. The charity wants people from across the country to get together for tea, coffee and cake in aid of supporting mobile cancer care.

Gloria continued: “Patients regularly comment on how great the nurses and drivers are, with the team immediately making them comfortable and offering them a cup of tea or coffee. That’s where the idea of Cuppa for Cancer Care came from, and we hope that people across the country will get together for this wonderful cause. The mobile units are a fabulous asset in their communities.”

Inside, the units are just like hospital treatment rooms, with four treatment chairs, chemotherapy pump stands, and medical storage facilities. They are equipped with air conditioning and a cooling and heating system for patient comfort, as well as a toilet and kitchen. Eleven NHS trusts currently have mobile cancer care units and last year they provided over 26,000 treatments.

Airedale NHS Foundation Trust operates two mobile cancer care units. The first, named Linda after a cancer patient, was launched in 2018. In 2021 the trust took delivery of brand-new unit called Christine after Hope for Tomorrow’s founder. Christine is also equipped with separate consultation rooms that extend hydraulically from the unit. The two units allow patients to be treated in Colne, Ilkley, Settle, Bingley, Skipton, Keighley, Wharfedale and at Airedale General Hospital.

“The two mobile units have made a huge difference to our patients and their quality of life and the ease of having treatment closer to their home helps patients through a very difficult journey. Treatments are planned round their normal activities, like shopping, catching up with friends and meeting up for a cuppa. The mobile units also help alleviate family and carer’s strain as the fatigue felt by their loved ones is reduced, there is no stress of driving to the hospital, difficulty with parking, waiting for treatment and being in the hospital environment. Patients too have more independence as they will drive to their appointments on the mobile units or even walk.

Pat continues:

“The atmosphere is beneficial to staff as they get to form closer relationships with the patients which in turn means the patients feel more supported. All our evidence shows the mobile units provide a positive impact on our patients’ lives.”

Hope for Tomorrow’s latest patient feedback shows that, on average, for each treatment, patients save two-and-a-half hours, 20 travel miles, and the stress of parking. With treatment lasting several months and sometimes years, the time and financial savings can be considerable. Seventy-one percent of patients said they can tolerate their treatment more easily on a mobile cancer care unit, while 47% felt that they were more likely to complete their full course of treatment.

Tina Seymour, Hope for Tomorrow chief executive said:

“The mobile units allow cancer patients to have their treatment in a much more convenient way, taking away the disruption that long journeys can bring. They tell us that it makes a huge difference to them and they love the friendly atmosphere provided by the NHS staff and drivers. It costs £212 a day to keep a mobile cancer care unit on the road so fundraising is vital to keep the service going.”

Hope for Tomorrow was founded by Christine Mills MBE in December 2003. Christine had a very personal reason for wanting to establish mobile cancer care; her husband David suffered from cancer. The couple had to endure the stress and pain of regular 60-mile journeys to the oncology centre for his treatment. Christine also sadly died from cancer in September 2018.

Anyone interested in hosting an event, however big or small, should visit www.hopefortomorrow.org.uk/cuppa  to sign up for a free fundraising pack.

Cuppa for Cancer Care is sponsored by Janes Pantry.

For more information on Hope for Tomorrow visit www.hopefortomorrow.org.uk