Former Boro boss Bryan Robson calls for improved cancer care
MrĀ Robson, who was known as āCaptain Marvelā during his 22-year playing career, had treatment for throat cancer in 2011 while managing the Thailand national menās team. He had radiotherapy and made a full recovery.
The former England and Manchester United captainĀ has since become a patron for Radiotherapy UK, a charity campaigning to improve access to the treatment in the UK.
Speaking at an event run by the charity to mark World Cancer Day, he urged people to attend screening appointments and to get checked if they have any symptoms.
Bryan Robson. (Picture: ARCHIVE)
He said: āItās great for when youāre getting to that age to get that check-up, because you never know what theyāll find. Because early detection, as they say, thatās the most important thing.ā
MrĀ RobsonĀ made 461 appearances for Manchester United during his 13-year career with the Red Devils, scoring 99 goals. The combative midfielder marked the end of his United career by winning two Premier League titles.
He also had successful spells as a player and manager for both West Bromwich Albion and Middlesbrough.
With England, he captained the side for 65 games, becoming a mainstay of the team during international campaigns throughout the 1980s.
The 68-year-old said his cancer diagnosis nearly 15 years ago came as a shock.
āI felt fit and healthy,ā he said. āI had a bit of a swelling in my throat and I just thought I had a sore throat.
Bryan Robson and former Lib Dem leader Tim Farron. (Image: PA)
āI went to see a specialist over the road from where I lived and he shined a torch down me, and said āIām terribly sorry, MrĀ Robson, that doesnāt look like a sore throat to me, it looks like a tumorous cancer growthā.
āThe same day he got me in, got me an MRI scan, spoke to his people who are specialists and everything and said yes, it was a tumour.
āI was just so lucky that they caught it so early, but it really shocked me, because I used to go to the gym every morning in Thailand. I felt really fit, so I just didnāt expect anything like that.ā
He added that the Government, which announced on Tuesday that it is asking experts, patients and medics to shape a national cancer plan, should put resources into improving cancer diagnosis and treatment.
He said: āI know that the Government have a really difficult job because they are always having to fund all different aspects of life, but I think, when you come to cancers and illnesses, you canāt get anything much more important than saving peopleās lives.
āThat should be more or less a priority because youāre saving peopleās lives.ā
Specialists have said the Government needs to be āradicalā with its plans for the future of cancer care and diagnosis, and said ministers already have information that could help them shape their plans.
Professor Pat Price, an academic clinical oncologist who is chairwoman of Radiotherapy UK, said 500,000 patients have missed the 62-day treatment target for cancer in the last 10 years.
She said: āWe are missing the targets left, right and centre. Itās great that theyāve announced the national cancer plan ā our concern is that in 2022 a cancer plan was announced and that got lost in the wash, so we are really hoping the Government will deliver on this.
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āWe have got to be absolutely radical. Cancer survival and delays have fallen off a cliff, and we are so far behind and, really, unless we take this opportunity now, we will have this same situation for the next 10 years.ā
She added: āOne in two people get cancer, itās everybody, everybodyās got somebody, at any age. Weāre predicted to have a 30% increase in cancer by 2040. We canāt cope now, what we are going to do? Weāre drowning already.
āItās got to be a Kate Bingham (head of the Covid vaccine taskforce) moment, itās as big as the vaccine. Itās got to be a national āget everything out of the way and clear the barriers and just do itā moment. Otherwise itās going to be bad.ā