Thomas Pocklington Trust Works With NHS on Bowel Cancer Screening

Date posted: 15th May 2024

Thousands of people with sight loss in England will find it easier to participate in life-saving bowel cancer screening thanks to a new specially designed NHS tool. People who are blind or partially sighted will be offered a specially designed tool to help with independently completing Faecal Immunochemical Test (FIT) kit, which can detect signs of bowel cancer.

The FIT aid tool is an adaptation which makes the standard FIT test more accessible with a channel that enables the sample to be guided into the bottle, as well as a stand that holds the FIT tube steady to help those with manual dexterity issues, it includes options for braille instructions, an audio CD or a link to audio and video instructions.

NHS England worked closely with the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) and Thomas Pocklington Trust who helped test the design and instructions, alongside the FIT kit supplier Mast Group Ltd.

One person who is supporting the NHS’s FIT aid trial is Terry, 70 years-old from Newcastle. Terry is one of the volunteers with sight loss who have helped the NHS and its partners to develop the tool.

Terry said: “I’ve been sent bowel screening kits to do at home before, but I found them really tricky to do as it was a real struggle to put my sample into the tube without asking for help.

“I was sent the FIT aid with my latest testing kit, and it was a great improvement on the earlier versions. It was very easy to use with simple accessible instructions. Anyone with sight loss will be able to complete the test themselves. That can only be good news as more people will do the test meaning there’s a better chance of catching anything wrong much quicker.”

During the six-month pilot, around 500 people with sight loss will be sent the FIT aid tool to help them complete the test.

If successful, it may be rolled out initially to thousands more people to help improve the accessibility and uptake of bowel cancer screening, whilst reducing healthcare inequalities.

Under the NHS cancer screening programme, FIT kits are posted to people when they are eligible and completed at home by putting a poo sample in a small tube and returning it by post to the NHS for testing.

Since April 2019, when the NHS started using FIT kits, national uptake has increased from 59.2% to 67.8%, enabling more cancers to be detected early.

Data shows the number of NHS checks for bowel and other cancers have topped three million in a year for the first time – more than doubling in the last decade.

Early detection of bowel cancer, the third most common type of cancer in England, can significantly improve treatment outcomes.

Steve Russell, National Director for Vaccinations and Screening at NHS England, said: “This tool will enable more people with accessibility issues to complete their FIT kits and ensure we continue to diagnose cancers earlier when it is easier to treat them – potentially saving thousands of lives.

“Our partnership with RNIB, Thomas Pocklington Trust, and Mast has been instrumental in developing this tool and is a good example of how the health service is committed to tackling health inequalities for the benefit of all patients.”

Under the NHS Cancer Screening Programme, a FIT kit is made available to everyone aged 54 to 74 and is expanding to include all over 50s.

Screening is offered every two years, and approximately 2 out of 100 people will require further tests after using their FIT kit.

Charles Colquhoun, CEO, Thomas Pocklington Trust, said: “The ideal for blind and partially sighted people is to see accessibility designed in as early as possible to all NHS services including screening and medical tests, such as the FIT aid home test kit for bowel cancer screening. For full adoption of adapted test kits, it is important that people who are ‘flagged’ needing adjustments are made clear across NHS systems to trigger accessible information and test kits in the most appropriate format. Back-up human support for blind and partially sighted people on NHS premises would still need to happen as it currently does for any vulnerable people having difficulty with home testing.”

Emily George, Product Specialist (FIT) at Mast Group Ltd. said:” Mast Group Ltd. is proud to have designed and manufactured the patent-pending FIT aid, a pioneering device to make FIT testing more accessible and reduce inequalities.  We are grateful for the contributions from the RNIB, Thomas Pocklington Trust and the NHS England Bowel Screening Programme who have been invaluable to the development of the FIT aid and its continued evolution as part of the in-service evaluation.”

If you are registered with the NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Programme as requiring reasonable adjustments, you will receive a FIT aid. Should you have received a non-accessible bowel cancer screen test kit, then you can call the NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Helpline on 0800 707 60 60.

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