Sir Cliff Richard has revealed he has been treated for prostate cancer for the past year. In an interview on ITVâs Good Morning Britain, the 85-year-old singer revealed that his cancer had âgone at the momentâ and supported calls for a national screening test for men.
âI donât know whether itâs going to come back,â said Sir Cliff. âWe canât tell those sort of things but we need to, absolutely, Iâm convinced, get there, get tested, get checked.â
Sir Cliff explained that he was diagnosed after a health check for his insurance ahead of a concert tour of Australia and New Zealand. Â âI was about to embark on a tour. I was going to Australia and New Zealand, and the promoter said well we need your insurance, so youâll need to be checked up for something,â said the musician.Â
âThey found I had a prostate with cancer, but the good fortune was, it was not very old. And the other thing is that it had not metastasized. It hadnât moved into bones or anything like that.â
Sir Cliff, who is known for his long standing music career and hits such as The Young Ones and We Donât Talk Anymore, said the lack of a national screening programme was âabsolutely ridiculousâ.
âWe have governments to look after our country and those who live in that country, so I canât see how you can say, âOh we can do this, we can do that, but we donât do this for these peopleâ,â he said. âWe all deserve to have the same ability to have a test and then start treatments really early.
âIt seems to me â Iâve only been for one year now in touch with cancer, but every time Iâve talked with anybody this has come up and so I think our Government must listen to us.â
Sir Cliff also shared his hopes of collaborating with King Charles III on awareness, who announced last week that his cancer treatment would be reduced in the new year.
âIâve been involved with many charities over the years and if the King is happy to front it for us, Iâm sure loads of people, I certainly would join him,â he said. âIf the King is listening, I think most of us would say âyeah â weâre availableâ.â
Sir Cliffâs calls for national testing come as the UK National Screening Committee announced a draft recommendation in November for a targeted prostate cancer screening programme. If implemented, it would invite men aged 45-61 with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 genetic mutation for biennial screening.
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