Lockdown cancer “timebomb” revealed, and is To Kill a Mockingbird still relevant after 60 years?
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Daily News
News
News & Politics
Publication Date |
Jul 10, 2020
Episode Duration |
00:10:45

The Evening Standard's revealed how thousands of Londoners are missing urgent checks for cancer as the full impact of the coronavirus lockdown emerges. Those seeking a two-week hospital referral from their GP fell by almost 18,000 in May — 53 per cent lower than the same month last year, and worse than the rest of the country. The number of Londoners starting life-saving or life-extending treatment also fell by about 1,000 — 35 per cent lower than last year. Health editor Ross Lydall tells us how health campaigners fear clockdown-cancer-timebomb-coronavirus-a4494671.html">ancer has become "the forgotten C" during the Covid-19 pandemic. 

And, Harper Lee's classic novel To Kill a Mockingbird is turning 60, but is the race relations story told through the eyes of young white girl still relevant in a Black Lives Matter world? We speak to best-selling author wilkinson.com/">Lauren Wilkinson, whose novel American Spy, about a black female FBI agent in a white male dominated field, was named by Barack Obama as one of the best of last year. 


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