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Cancer Patients Fund Own Chemo Amid NHS Wait Woes
21 Dec
Summary
- Over 18,500 private chemo appointments recorded between April-June.
- NHS missed key cancer targets for diagnosis and first treatment.
- Patients worry NHS pressures affect survival chances.

Cancer patients are increasingly turning to private healthcare or their personal savings to access life-saving chemotherapy as the National Health Service struggles with ongoing treatment delays. From April to June of this year, there were over 18,500 privately funded chemotherapy appointments, marking a 1.7% increase compared to the same period in the previous year. This trend underscores the growing pressure on NHS services and the lengths to which patients will go to receive timely care.
The NHS has failed to meet its two main cancer targets, with only two-thirds of patients receiving a diagnosis and commencing treatment within 62 days of an urgent referral. This situation is creating significant anxiety for patients, with a recent survey revealing that half of those undergoing cancer treatment expressed concerns about how these pressures might affect their prognosis.
Patient experiences illustrate the critical need for timely intervention. One individual, Nicky Luff, booked both NHS and private appointments after discovering a lump, only for her NHS slot to be cancelled. Now undergoing private treatment, she reflects on the "mental torture" of waiting and the uncertainty it brings, while others face extended waits for crucial results, emphasizing the profound emotional toll of delayed cancer care.




