Tag: cancer

Wythenshawe cancer charity set to help more families after centre’s £338m facelift

Macmillan Cancer Research Centre in Wythenshawe is undergoing a major extension to support more people whose lives are blighted by the disease.

The centre is based in the grounds of Wythenshawe Hospital and is a vital service to individuals and their families who are living with cancer.

The new-look centre in the grounds of Wythenshawe Hospital  will provide a much larger activity space and an additional therapy/meeting room, when the £338million refurbishment is complete.

The Macmillan team will be able to offer more counselling, complementary therapies, cancer survivorship programmes and benefits and financial advice sessions.

Debbie Smith, Macmillan Cancer Information and Support Centre Manager at Wythenshawe Hospital, said:” This investment is a fantastic opportunity to expand the centre and, more importantly, help us enhance the service we provide to meet the needs, not just physical and clinical, but also financial, emotional and psychological, of even more people affected by cancer in South Manchester.”

In 2017 the centre supported nearly 27,000 people in various ways from supplying leaflets, CDs, books, activity support groups and counselling.  They also provided over 800 grants totaling to £178K, helping with heating and travel costs, clothing, new appliances for people living with cancer.

The charity urgently need schools, community groups and businesses to organise a fundraising event to help support this vital service for local people living with cancer.

For more information and fundraising ideas or to make a donation please contact cjenkinson@macmillan.org.uk. 

And anyone requiring  support from the centre can call the team on 0161 291 4876.

After 10 years helping cancer sufferers, Glenn retires to new life in the sun

glenn-dawson-richard-hunt
Glenn Dawson and Richard Hunt

A Macmillan advice worker based at Wythenshawe Hospital who has helped ease the money worries for people affected by cancer by securing extra benefits, is retiring to the sun after 10 years service. 

Glenn Dawson, 58, is a member of a Macmillan team dedicated to helping people secure government grants and benefits to help reduce the financial problems caused by a cancer diagnosis. 

He devoted his days to help Manchester residents receive the support they need, after losing his wife Emma, 58, to bowel cancer in 2011, and experiencing money worries first hand. 

Since then he has personally secured more than £16 million in benefits for people affected by cancer through working for the service, based at North Manchester General Hospital, Manchester Royal Infirmary and University Hospital of South Manchester in Wythenshawe. 

He said: “The role of a benefits advisor is very important, as more and more people are being diagnosed with cancer every day. In a lot of cases some people have never claimed benefits before, or never thought they would have to, and that’s when we can help support them and secure the benefits or grants they are entitled to.

“I will really miss being part of the Macmillan advice team in Manchester, which provides such a vital service. But I feel a real sense of achievement, to not only have helped raise more than £16 million in benefits for people affected by cancer, but to know the service we provide has such a massive impact on their lives.”

Glenn, who has two children and a grandchild, and was part of the team that started the Macmillan Benefits Helpline, is retiring to Portugal with his wife, Linda, where he plans to work in property management and run karaoke nights in their local bar.

Richard Hunt, Macmillan Partnership Manager for Greater Manchester, added: “I’d like to thank Glenn for his unwavering and dedicated support, both professionally and personally, over the last 10 years. He has been a fantastic asset to the team, and a great ambassador for Macmillan, and he has helped provide vital financial support and advice to thousands of people affected by cancer in Manchester, when they have needed it most.”

 The Macmillan Advice Service in Manchester, which is provided by Manchester City Council and funded by Macmillan Cancer Support, works to help address the financial needs of people affected by cancer.

 It was launched in 2006 and has raised more than £52 million in extra benefits for people affected by cancer over the past decade.

 For further advice, or to make an appointment to see an advisor, contact North Manchester General Hospital on 0161 922 3517, Manchester Royal Infirmary on 0161 276 3244 / 3246 or University Hospital of South Manchester on 0161 291 4931 / 2165.

Wythenshawe Hospital praised by cancer charity for improvements in how it deals with patients

The NHS trust which runs Wythenshawe Hospital has been praised by a leading cancer care charity after it was ranked one of the most improved in the country for patient experience.

The University Hospital of South Manchester NHS Foundation Trust has been ranked joint second in a league table released by Macmillan Cancer Support, based on research commissioned by NHS England. Continue reading “Wythenshawe Hospital praised by cancer charity for improvements in how it deals with patients”