In chronicling the fight against cancer, it describes any number of important events – be that the debate surrounding combination versus sequential, single agent chemotherapy, the provision of palliative care or the realisation that a conservative surgical approach, as opposed to radical mastectomy, might be equally beneficial and less disfiguring for patients with breast cancer.
It also focuses on achievements further afield that have helped improve survival rates for many cancers – the vast technological advances that have led to the development of CT, MR and PET imaging, the sequencing of the human genome and the realisation that environmental exposures (smoking, alcohol, obesity and sunbeds) are significant causative factors that need to be addressed. In doing so, it tells a calm and sober story of human endeavour.
The power of the human story, the story of those who have succumbed to cancer and those who have survived, feels sanitised – devoid of the emotion that might invigorate this short film
Whilst the film also acknowledges the role of survivors, politics and ‘people power’, you sense that the nod to these groups is simply that – a nod. The power of the human story, the story of those who have succumbed to cancer and those who have survived, feels sanitised – devoid of the emotion that might invigorate this short film. Moreover, you can’t help but feel that it glosses over many of the challenges that remain – the failure to diagnose and treat virulent cancers, especially pancreatic and thoracic disease, the inadequacy of treatment in the non-industrialised world, and the considerable costs arising from non-adherence.
This is a non-commercial, editorially independent piece, supported by Cancer Research UK and funded by an educational grant from Roche. The filmmakers set out to educate and inform those who are affected by cancer. Whether they have achieved that is questionable, as the focus and language is largely directed towards the medical fraternity. However, in a little over an hour, this film provides a high level overview of what has been achieved in 50 years, which will be enjoyed by many a clinician.