In 2020, life as we knew it changed. Businesses closed, we couldn't visit loved ones and we missed out on the simple things we used to take for granted. As the pandemic took hold, countries all over the world ordered people to work from home unless they held a job considered by the government as essential.
In the UK, this included frontline health and social care workers, education and childcare staff, and those that keep society running - from the people getting food to supermarket shelves, to those that look after our communities. These are all, in my opinion, absolutely essential.
But, as Chief Executive of a cancer research charity, I find myself debating whether some jobs were missed off the list.
What about cancer research? Shouldn’t that also be considered essential work?
Millions of people around the world depend on it, and will do in the future, so shouldn’t we be doing what we can to keep it going? In the UK, cancer services have been hit hard. The decision to treat a cancer patient during an infectious disease outbreak is not easy, and many cancer treatments impact the patient’s immune system and make them vulnerable to infection.
Fewer people are being referred to the hospital with suspected cancer symptoms because people are avoiding visits to their GPs. Ultimately, people aren’t getting the early diagnoses or timely treatments they so desperately need. But we can’t forget about lab-based research.

In order to continue making breakthroughs to save lives and stop suffering, cancer research must remain a priority.
The research journey is a long one and it can take up to 20 years for a bold idea to lead to new treatments used in hospitals. But with 1 in 2 people diagnosed with cancer in their lifetime, these new breakthroughs offer hope for the future. Any delays when it comes to starting new cancer cures could be the difference between life and death for many more people in years to come.
The long-term consequences might not be visible now, but that doesn’t mean that they aren’t there, or that they won’t have a real impact on people with cancer in the future.
While it is undoubtedly important that we avoid unnecessary contact with other people to reduce the spread of the virus, could we not also have found a way to allow cancer researchers back in the lab to carry on working?
Research is what will save the lives of mothers, fathers, daughters and sons who will be hit by a cancer diagnosis in their lifetime.
The more delays to this research as a result of the ongoing pandemic, the more chance we have of losing bright ideas that could one day lead to new cures for cancer.
As we start to reimagine what our ‘new normal’ looks like across the UK (and across the world), we must make sure that cancer research is at the top of the agenda.

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