Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • 4/13/2025
A new report is blaming late diagnosis and a lack of treatment for poor survival rates for women diagnosed with gynaecological cancers. Women's health campaigners are calling for more investment from government - saying chronic underinvestment in research, has led to a crisis for women.

Category

đŸ“ș
TV
Transcript
00:01Remind me who's got early morning tomorrow.
00:05No.
00:06Ali Crawford is a busy mum to three teenagers.
00:09I'm over 360.
00:12In 2022, the 51-year-old discovered she had a rare uterine cancer.
00:22Eight and a half weeks it took for diagnosis.
00:25My time stood still.
00:28I used everything that I knew to cope every day.
00:33And then I had to, at three o'clock, be normal mum.
00:41Her treatment is ongoing and has involved multiple surgeries
00:44and 11 cycles of chemotherapy.
00:47Ali doesn't know how long she has to live.
00:50She feels precious time was wasted just getting a diagnosis.
00:55Everything was held up in getting scans.
00:58But I knew I had a ticking time bomb in my pelvis.
01:02It was a very confusing time.
01:06Hello.
01:07How are you?
01:08Ali Crawford.
01:09Pleasure to see you.
01:10Thank you so much.
01:11In the lead up to the election,
01:12150 terminally ill women and their supporters are visiting their local MPs,
01:18campaigning for more funding for gynaecological cancers.
01:21A commitment of a hundred million.
01:23Yeah.
01:24Handing over a new report from the Australian New Zealand Gynaecological Oncology Group
01:28that's found women are unnecessarily dying because of a chronic lack of investment
01:34and their symptoms are not being taken seriously.
01:37When I read the stark realities of that report, I was completely kind of a mixture of devastated,
01:45but also now understood why we were in this position.
01:50The survival rates are as poor as the survival rates for all cancers 50 years ago.
01:55When we add in other drugs, there's a good interaction.
01:58Professor Claire Scott is a scientist and medical oncologist.
02:02I believe that there hasn't been an improvement in survival because we simply don't know enough
02:07about these very rare cancers.
02:09We need more research and more clinical trials and that requires more support and more awareness.
02:15The report reveals 23 women will be diagnosed with a gynaecological cancer each day by 2035.
02:23These include ovarian, uterine, endometrial, cervical, vaginal and vulval cancers.
02:29For nearly two decades, these have been the poorest funded cancers.
02:33The group is calling for a $100 million commitment over the next four years from the government
02:38to improve treatment and research.
02:43In Northern Tasmania, Alex Neville thought her symptoms were part of menopause
02:48when they appeared in 2020 and struggled to get a diagnosis.
02:52I'd never, ever heard, actually never heard of endometrial cancer beforehand.
02:57I didn't know that abnormal bleeding was a sign, so I didn't know to be concerned.
03:03Nothing can prepare you for hearing those words.
03:06Alex is also part of the campaign for more funding, and she's passing on her experience
03:10to the next generation of doctors through a Survivors Teaching Students program,
03:15raising awareness for the importance of recognising symptoms.
03:19If we get it early enough, the outcome for endometrial cancer is really positive.
03:23We've got to get it early enough.
03:26Alex has endured 27 rounds of radiation, 13 chemotherapy cycles,
03:32immunotherapy and clinical trials.
03:35She also doesn't know how long she'll live.
03:38Involvement in the clinical trials is fabulous because it will buy me extra time,
03:42but what I'm also doing is I'm adding to science, I'm adding to knowledge.
03:46So what I'm doing now as a clinical trial will hopefully be a first-line treatment
03:50for a woman in the future.
03:52I need to believe that I can hang on long enough for the science to get back on track.
04:02I want to approach this with hope, not fear.
04:12To be continued...
04:14...

Recommended