Not quite sure how UKip are going to solve the problem, brionon.
There is definitely an issue, no question. Part of that was a lack of regional centres and networks of excellence - too many hospitals and too many consultants all treating too few patients. That has changed, but slowly, in part because the public often see a re-organisation of services within their local hospital as a threat, so politicians and the NHS are not driving through the necessary changes fast enough.
Nor do those figures reflect the changes in clinical practice implemented during the early 2000s - too early for that, as yet, but we can see encouraging upward trends in survival rates and Time to Treat etc.
And as ever, there is the problem of initial diagnosis- still far too often it is far too late in this country compared to others within Europe, for example, for reasons not entirely clear - many Brits are very reluctant to see their GPs about what might seem to be minor chronic ailments, which could in fact be early symptoms of a cancer.
So I think the DM are being unnecessarily gloomy with this article.