Britain's leading cancer charity has called for the government to come clean over the future of its much-vaunted bowel screening programme
Responding to an editorial in the British Medical Journal, Cancer Research UK's chief executive, Professor Alex Markham, accused the Department of Health of "unacceptable prevarication" and said he feared the programme, which is designed to cut bowel cancer mortality, was under serious threat.
The programme was scheduled to be rolled out in April this year, but so far no resources have been put in place to make it happen.
In an editorial published online by BMJ, Professor Wendy Atkin of the Cancer Research UK Colorectal Cancer Unit says that while the NHS financial crisis is clearly the cause of the programme's delay, it is still unclear whether this is a temporary hiccough or a shelving of the programme.
She warns of dire consequences if the government reneges on its commitment to the programme.
Cancer Research UK's chief executive Professor Alex Markham said: "The government's much heralded bowel screening programme was supposed to start in the next ten days and was set to cut deaths from bowel cancer.
"But despite constant reassurances that this vital initiative was on schedule not a penny has been put in place to set up the necessary screening centres for the programme to be rolled out as planned.
"This prevarication from the Department of Health is completely unacceptable and continuing delay will lead to people dying unnecessarily from bowel cancer."