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Open letter from cancer charities to the public

40 charities and organisations have written an open letter, urging the public to help keep vulnerable people safe as restrictions ease.

Tomorrow in England we will see Covid restrictions lifted, with people will no longer required to wear face masks in crowded places or maintain social distance.

Many of people will be looking forward to tomorrow as the day they get their “freedoms back”. But for many people with cancer, tomorrow will be a day when freedoms are taken away. This is because their cancer, or their treatment for cancer, means the vaccine, even after two doses, is less likely to protect them from serious illness from Covid than it is for the general public.

Over the last few months, many people with cancer have been starting to get back to normal, meeting up with their friends outdoors or sitting outside at cafes and restaurants.

They have felt able to do this because the people around them have been wearing masks and keeping their distance. The more people exercise their freedom to stop wearing masks and stop social distancing, the more people with cancer will feel they have to stop their normal activities, and will feel more worried when they have to do things like use public transport.

We had hoped the Government would continue to insist people carry on wearing masks and social distancing in crowded places. But given the Government has decided not to do this, we are asking every person in England, knowing you already do so much for people with cancer through the financial support you give us, to do three things to help them further over the next few weeks:

  • Keep wearing masks in crowded places. There is good evidence they stop the spread, and for all you know, that person sitting a few seats down from you on the bus might be on their way to their chemotherapy appointment.
     
  • Keep your distance from people you don’t know. There is no way of knowing if someone has cancer and so might be vulnerable to the virus, so it’s best to assume everyone you come into contact with might be.
     
  • Get vaccinated if you haven’t done so already. Particularly for people with cancer who have a compromised immune system, the more people who are vaccinated, the safer they will be.

These three things are especially important in England, where the restrictions are being lifted first. But they are also things will help people with cancer in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, too.

Just one person doing these three things could make a real difference to someone with cancer. And the more of us who do them, the more we will help keep people with cancer safe, and send them a message of solidarity during the difficult weeks ahead.

  1.     Michelle Mitchell, CEO, Cancer Research UK
  2.     Delyth Morgan, CEO, Breast Cancer Now
  3.     Gemma Peters, CEO, Blood Cancer UK
  4.     Lynda Thomas, CEO, Macmillan Cancer Support
  5.     Fiona Hazell, CEO, Leukaemia UK
  6.     Diana Jupp, CEO, Pancreatic Cancer UK
  7.     Michelle Vickers, CEO, Head and Neck Cancer Foundation
  8.     Victoria Clare, CEO, Ovacome
  9.     Zack Pemberton-Whiteley, CEO, Leukaemia Care
  10.     Laura Kerby, CEO, Myeloma UK
  11.     Pamela Healy OBE, CEO, British Liver Trust
  12.     Ropinder Gill, CEO, Lymphoma Action
  13.     Nina Barough CBE, CEO, Walk The Walk
  14.     Annwen Jones OBE, CEO, Target Ovarian Cancer
  15.     Liz Darlison, CEO, Mesothelioma UK
  16.     Rose Woodward, CEO, Kidney Cancer Support Network
  17.     Samantha Dixon, CEO, Jo's Cervical Cancer Trust
  18.     Tony Heddon, Chairman, Neuroblastoma UK
  19.     Robin Pritchard & Paula Hargadon, Co-Directors, Cancer Care Map
  20.     Marc Auckland, Chair, CLL Support
  21.     Sue Farrington Smith, CEO, Brain Tumour Research
  22.     Athena Lamnisos, CEO, The Eve Appeal
  23.     Sarahjane Robertson, CEO, Look Good Feel Better
  24.     Jeannie Rigby, Director, Action Bladder Cancer UK
  25.     Jane Lyons, CEO, Cancer52
  26.     Richard Davidson, CEO, Sarcoma UK
  27.     Paula Chadwick, CEO, Roy Castle Lung Cancer Foundation
  28.     Tina Seymour, CEO, Hope for Tomorrow
  29.     Gillian Nuttall, CEO, Melanoma UK
  30.     Ken Mastris, Chairman, Tackle Prostate Cancer
  31.     Anna Webb, Manager, Myrovlytis Trust
  32.     Cary Wakefield, CEO, Ovarian Cancer Action
  33.     Alastair Richards, CEO, North West Cancer Research
  34.     Nigel Shattock, Director of Comms, World Cancer Research Fund
  35.     Kathryn Scott, CEO, Yorkshire Cancer Research
  36.     Dr David Jenkinson, CEO, The Brain Tumour Charity
  37.     Nick Turkentine, CEO, Kidney Cancer UK
  38.     Natalie Heskell, CEO CoppaFeel!
  39.     Henny Braund, CEO, Anthony Nolan
  40.     Genevieve Edwards, CEO, Bowel Cancer UK