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Experts urge more cancer care innovation amid survival rate slowdown

Doctors are calling for more innovative technologies to improve outcomes for cancer patients

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Oncology experts have called for more innovation as figures show Britain’s progress in improving cancer survival rates is at its slowest in 50 years.

A report, commissioned by Cancer Research UK, has found that progress in cancer survival in the UK is now slower than it has been for 50 years, warning the country lags behind other nations, including Australia, Canada, Denmark and Norway in tackling the disease.

The study found cancer waiting times across the country are among the worst on record, with too many cancers diagnosed at a late stage and unequal access to treatment.

Now oncology experts are arguing the UK government should move from a mindset of  “sticking with what works” and roll out more innovative technologies to help patients access the latest treatment options available.

“We need to move fast to address the changing landscape of cancer,” said Dr Monique Gary, breast surgical oncologist at Grand View Health.

“We need to invite the relevant stakeholders to the table, and in the case of breast cancer, primarily women, and listen to what women are saying to develop technologies that are accessible, affordable, scalable and most importantly, adoptable.

“Moving from a fixed mindset of ‘sticking with what works’ in the present to a growth mindset that is ready to challenge the status-quo and adopt innovation takes the perfect blend of research, careful vetting, private public partnerships that work and ultimately lead to policy change.”

Dr April Spencer, a breast surgical oncologist and lecturer on breast cancer and breast health, said: “We have to start investing our time and our resources in to research development of new technologies so that scientific discoveries can go from bench to bedside in not only a safe and effective manner but in a timely fashion so people can benefit from the most up-to-date medical treatment during their lifetime.

“The prioritisation of scientific support in policymaking is also crucial. When policymakers overlook or undervalue scientific input, it can lead to inefficient implementation of new technologies, missed opportunities for advancements, and potential risks to society.”

Although the pace of adopting technologies in the NHS had accelerated following the pandemic, the health service is still slow to adopt new technological ideas.

A King’s Fund report, published in June 2023, concluded that few new technologies are systematically deployed in the health and care system and none have reached their full potential. 

Studies also show the NHS takes too long to adopt NICE-approved treatments and therapies.

It is no longer news that we are among the last countries in Europe to initiate systemic anticancer therapies that have been proven to improve survival in randomised phase 3 trials,” said Dr Olubukola Ayodele, consultant medical oncologist at University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust.

“There have been cuts to research funding, leading to longer times to get clinical trials set up, making the UK unattractive to global sponsorship and participation in clinical trials.

“Recently, the National Cancer Research Institute (NCRI) announced that it was closing down due to a lack of funding. Decisions such as this could further put innovations in cancer treatment at risk.”

Ayodele said the government should do more to ensure women have access to care.

“The inequalities in access to healthcare among the four nations are evident in cancer prevention, diagnosis and outcomes. However, having access to the best and latest treatment options is essential to improving cancer survival,” she said.

“Prevention is also key. About 40 per cent of cancers can be prevented. Therefore, targeted public awareness campaigns that support positive health behaviours should be implemented.”

Helen Dickens, deputy chief executive at Target Ovarian Cancer, said: “It is paramount that the UK government focuses on the fundamentals of ovarian cancer diagnosis and treatment, as there are key areas not being addressed which could benefit from innovation.

“Prioritising investment in ovarian cancer research, publicising national symptoms awareness campaigns and providing training and support for GPs could result in more lives saved from this devastating disease.

“A combination of these tactics could mean that more women are diagnosed at the earliest stage, opposed to a later stage when the cancer is harder to treat. It could mean that healthcare professionals recognise the symptoms from an initial appointment, and women aren’t waiting three months for a correct diagnosis. And it could mean that more women survive.”

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Why cardiovascular health deserves a spotlight in femtech

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When we think about women’s health innovation, certain categories immediately come to mind: fertility tracking, pregnancy care, menopause management.

These are vital areas that have long been neglected, and the femtech revolution has brought much-needed attention and resources to them.

But there’s another area of women’s health that remains dangerously overlooked, despite being the leading cause of death for women worldwide: cardiovascular disease.

Heart disease kills more women than all forms of cancer combined, yet most women don’t know this.

For decades, cardiovascular research has been designed around male bodies, male symptoms, and male experiences.

The result is a healthcare system that often fails to recognise when women are having heart attacks, misdiagnoses their symptoms and prescribes treatments that were never tested on female patients.

Women are more likely to die from their first heart attack or stroke than men, and they’re less likely to receive life-saving interventions in time.

This is precisely why the Femtech World Awards have teamed up with Women As One to create a dedicated category for cardiovascular health innovation.

With this award, we want to shine a light on the entrepreneurs, researchers, clinicians and advocates who are working to close not just a gap in care but a gap in innovation, research and recognition.

The cardiovascular health innovation award is an opportunity to celebrate this work and to call for more of it.

If you know of a company, researcher, or organisation doing groundbreaking work in cardiovascular health for women, now is the time to nominate them.

Perhaps it’s a startup developing wearable technology that predicts cardiac events in pregnant women. Maybe it’s a research team uncovering the links between hormonal health and heart disease.

It could be a community health initiative bringing cardiovascular screening to underserved populations of women.

Whoever they, or you are, submit your nomination here.

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WHO hosts parliamentary dialogue on women’s health

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The World Health Organization (WHO) welcomed a delegation of parliamentarians to its Geneva headquarters for a high-level dialogue on women’s health and sexual and reproductive health and rights.

The meeting on 20 January 2026 focused on women’s health, sexual and reproductive health and rights, noncommunicable diseases (long-term conditions such as cancer and diabetes) and global health cooperation.

The exchange was convened by the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung and the UNITE Parliamentarians Network for Global Health, bringing together parliamentarians from Albania, Germany, Georgia, Mexico, Slovakia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Sweden and Zimbabwe.

A central theme was the need to move beyond fragmented approaches to women’s health.

Dr Alia El-Yassir, WHO director for gender, equity and diversity, highlighted that outcomes are shaped by gender inequalities, social norms and structural barriers across the life course, requiring coordinated action across health systems.

Thirty years after the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, a landmark framework adopted in 1995 to advance gender equality and women’s rights, Dr Anna Coates, WHO gender equality technical lead, noted that progress on women’s health remains uneven.

She called for health systems that are more gender-responsive and able to address women’s health holistically across the life course.

Parliamentarians stressed that health is inseparable from wider social and economic policies, and called for stronger links between evidence, legislation and measurable impact at country level.

The meeting also focused on sexual and reproductive health and rights, where parliamentarians expressed interest in engaging on issues that directly affect their constituents.

Dr Pascale Allotey, director of WHO’s Department of Sexual, Reproductive, Maternal, Child, Adolescent Health and Ageing, outlined WHO’s life-course approach to sexual and reproductive health and rights.

She highlighted how needs evolve from birth to older age and how these are shaped by social determinants, humanitarian crises and demographic trends.

Dr Allotey underscored the role of parliamentarians in advancing sexual and reproductive health and rights and the importance of continued engagement with WHO to support evidence-based policy-making.

The agenda highlighted cancer as a growing priority for women’s health and for health system sustainability. Dr Prebo Barango, lead for the Cervical Cancer Elimination Initiative, Dr Meghan Doherty, consultant for palliative care, and Santiago Milan, lead for the WHO Global Platform for Access to Childhood Cancer Medicine, presented WHO’s integrated approach to cancer control.

Palliative care is treatment and support that aims to improve quality of life for people with serious illness by managing pain and other symptoms.

The discussion underlined the need for sustained political commitment and domestic investment to address noncommunicable diseases.

Parliamentarians shared national experiences showing the social and economic impacts of cancer on families and caregivers, reinforcing the importance of improving health literacy, reducing stigma and delivering people-centred care.

The meeting also addressed the state of global multilateralism.

Dr Jeremy Farrar, assistant director-general for health promotion, disease prevention and care, outlined how WHO has restructured to enhance efficiency, impact and capacity to support countries.

He reaffirmed WHO’s commitment to more systematic engagement with parliaments, recognising their role in shaping health policy, legislation and budgets.

The exchange concluded with a call for continued collaboration, including through partnerships with the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung and the UNITE Parliamentarians Network for Global Health, ahead of the UNITE Global Summit 2026 on 6–7 March in Manila, the Philippines.

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Women’s health firms face banking barriers after being tagged as ‘adult services’

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Financial services providers across Europe and the UK are incorrectly classifying female-focused healthcare ventures as high risk enterprises, placing them in the same category as weapons dealers and tobacco companies.

As reported by The Banker, research by advocacy organisation CensHERship found that many women’s wellness technology companies are being denied standard banking services and payment processing facilities because of flawed classification protocols.

The investigation found significant inconsistencies in how financial institutions assess these businesses. 

SheSpot, a British company specialising in female intimate wellness, received conflicting decisions from different divisions within the same bank.

Co-founder Kalila Bolton, who took part in the study, explained that one department initially classified their venture as “higher risk” alongside firearms and tobacco, while another branch of the same bank later said they were “fine with it”.

Similarly, HANX, a manufacturer of condoms designed to support vaginal microbiome health, faced payment processing rejection after being incorrectly labelled as an “adult services business”.

Published this week, the CensHERship analysis links these barriers to “outdated classification systems, over-compliance and cultural discomfort” that together prevent legitimate healthcare enterprises from accessing essential financial infrastructure.

The findings suggest that women’s wellness ventures are “routinely flagged, delayed, rejected or deplatformed”, outcomes that stem not from actual regulations but from financial and ecommerce systems that “default to caution” when dealing with women’s health topics that remain poorly understood or culturally sensitive.

CensHERship co founder Anna O’Sullivan said these results usually arise from unfamiliarity rather than deliberate discrimination.

“In most cases, this isn’t malicious or intentional — it’s what happens when people and systems meet something unfamiliar,” O’Sullivan said in a statement. 

“But this unconscious bias can materially affect a founder’s ability to start, grow and scale a business.”

Investment platform The Case for Her, which partnered with CensHERship on the report, described the issue through co founders Wendy Anderson and Cristina Ljungberg as a clear “market failure” when founders cannot secure basic banking relationships.

“Fixing this issue is essential if we want to unlock one of the most promising growth markets in global health,” they said.

Risk consultant Aoife Mansfield, managing director at Athrú Group and a contributor to the report, said that terms such as “vagina” or “menstrual” trigger automated alerts within financial systems because they appear on the same watchlists as adult entertainment or pornography, raising a “red flag” in the systems used by banks and payment service providers.

O’Sullivan urged financial service providers to update their internal procedures, review their risk tolerance settings and explicitly include women’s healthcare within their approved client categories.

“They could remove this friction almost overnight,” she said.

The CensHERship analysis includes findings from across the UK and Europe, based on survey responses from more than 30 women’s health enterprises and interviews with founders, insurance underwriters, and compliance and risk professionals.

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