I've been trying not to blow my own trumpet harrigran but I am a senior gastroenterologist specialist nurse. I've worked in the speciality for 20 years. I now perform endoscopy and was a bowel cancer screening practitioner before that. I think I know what I'm talking about. It is professional fact not a personal opinion.
And yes it is an ethical decision for the consultant. It is for his own professional safety. As I have previously mentioned they can only work as bowel cancer screeners (which is very different from being able to carry out a colonoscopy) if they have undergone additional training. For instance I can perform a colonoscopy but I am not a bowel cancer screener. I can take biopsies and remove polyps and if they turn out to have cancer in them then it will be me who has spotted it and diagnosed it, but that still doesn't make me a bowel cancer screener. It is an NHS service, and whilst it can take place in any setting it has to be with sign off and approval of the BCS service.
Of course you would have had your bowel cancer diagnosed in a private setting but not as part of the bowel screening service.
If you attend your GP with new symptoms such as fresh rectal blood, unintentional weight loss (if only
) and/or change in bowel habit then you will be provided with a qFit test which is the same test sent by the BCS programme. But it doesn't mean you are now part of that service. If this proves positive for blood you will then be referred via a two week wait referral system for a colonoscopy or scan, but still not as part of the BCS programme.
You only become part of the BCS service if you are automatically sent a kit when you reach the age threshold. You do not have to be symptomatic, merely the correct age.
I keep on saying: it is a completely separate pathway and that is why you should not muddle the two.
Sillyoldbird, you've raised quite a discussion! I hadn't appreciated you had yet to see the bowel cancer screening practitioner. They will put your mind at ease I'm sure. I think you will be pleasantly surprised that the wait will not be as long as you think you know! You are absolutely right not to do anything before you have spoken to them.
If you think Valium will help then there is no harm in having that discussion again with your GP.
BUT a word of warning: If you do get a prescription for Valium (or any other anti-anxiolytic) please contact the BCS nurses to ensure they are aware. You need to ask for advice about taking it on the day (or not) of the procedure. Guidelines vary in different hospitals but in ours we would not be giving the full sedative dose (or even none at all) if anti-anxiolytics are taken the same day due to concerns about overdosing.
My advice would be to take one step at a time, in the order it is advised by the experts. It is not a race. Nothing is going to change by trying to hurry things along, and sometimes it makes things worse.
Remember, so far the only thing you know for certain is that a small amount of blood has been detected in your poo, and you have been invited (and I stress the word invited) for a colonoscopy to investigate further. That is all.
And please try not to listen to those who do not have a full understanding of the bowel cancer screening programme, including friendly receptionists!
I hope this all makes sense and helps to ease your mind a little. I appreciate the wait between appointments can seem long and hard. NotSpaghetti has good advice, a swim or a long walk will do you the world of good.