The Food Programme

Fifteen years after her cancer diagnosis, Sheila Dillon asks what role food could play in cancer treatment, prevention and recovery - and why it is still so often overlooked.

Earlier this year, the Government published a new 10-year National Cancer Plan for England, aiming to save 320,000 lives and ensure three in four people survive at least five years after diagnosis by 2035. It’s been welcomed as an ambitious strategy, yet some say it has little to say about diet. References to food focus largely on reducing obesity - by making supermarkets to monitor and report on sales of healthy and unhealthy foods, and expanding access to weight-loss drugs. It also includes commitments to improving hospital food for children with cancer, and introducing prehabilitation programmes via the NHS App by 2028.

So where does that leave food itself - in treatment, in recovery, and in the risk of relapse?

Featuring interviews with:

Clare Doney, the clinical lead for personalised care for the Northern Cancer Alliance covering the North East and North Cumbria.

Dr Giota Mitrou, Executive Director of Research and Policy at World Cancer Research Fund International

Prof. Robert Thomas, head of oncology at the Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine, part of University College Hospital and consultant oncologist at Addenbrooks hospital in Cambridge.

Produced by Natalie Donovan for BBC Audio in Bristol

Resources:

https://mywellbeingspacenca.nhs.uk/

https://www.wcrf.org/living-well/living-with-cancer/cancer-and-nutrition-helpline/

These links will take you to an external website. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.