Normalise breast checks, says cancer specialist

Andrea OrmsbySouth West
News imageBBC Cancer patient Jemma Sleeman is sitting in a medical consultation room chair. She has long long brown hair and is wearing a blue shirt over a white T-shirt, jeans and red trainers. She also has a red hair band. She sits opposite oncology research doctor Madalina Chifu, who has shorter dark hair tied back in a bun. Dr Chifu is also wearing a blouse, skirt and trainers, plus is holding a clipboard to make notes during the appointment.BBC
Dr Madalina Chifu (right, here with patient Jemma Sleeman) says normalising checks will mean "everybody will do it"

Secondary schoolchildren should be educated to check their breasts every time they have a shower, according to an oncology research doctor.

About one in seven women in the UK will develop breast cancer during their lifetime, according to chancer charities. About 400 men are also diagnosed with breast cancer every year.

Dr Madalina Chifu, from the Royal Cornwall Hospital, said: "If you normalise it, then everybody will do it; like brushing their teeth or washing their face in the morning."

Dr Chifu said men and women should check their breast and chest area as often as possible, although added it "it doesn't have to become an obsession".

News imageA close-up of Madalina Chifu. She is sitting in a chair in a clinical setting, and is wearing a green top and has short dark hair partially tied back.
Dr Malindia Chifu says she is working on trying to offer "tomorrow's treatments today"

Dr Chifu has extensive experience conducting clinical trials in Cornwall, saying the NHS trust was currently running 77 trials, with 37 of them still open to recruitment.

The cancer research doctor said she "gets to see science translated in to real life" and believed the Royal Cornwall Hospital was offering patients "tomorrow's treatments today".

Jemma Sleeman, 47, from Newquay, was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2020.

She said she was still alive thanks to taking action quickly, and urged anyone who found a lump to go straight to the doctor.

She said: "Don't wait about. Don't be scared to go and get checked."

Ms Sleeman said she checked her breasts when she was lying in bed and recommended that people "get to know your normal, know your baseline".

She said she found a "pea-sized" lump in one breast just one month after she started checking them.

While being diagnosed, it was found the cancer had already spread to her lymph nodes.

She had the lump removed, as well as undergoing chemotherapy and radiotherapy.

She is now part of a clinical trial at the Royal Cornwall Hospital using a new blood test to pick up early signs of her cancer returning months or even years before it could be detected in a scan.

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