The Duke of Cambridge today praised ‘brilliant, brave and inspirational’ bowel babe Dame Deborah James as he met some of the staff who treated her.
He also donned medical scrubs and viewed first hand pioneering robotic surgery delivering faster, more accurate treatment to cancer patients on a visit to The Royal Marsden Hospital in Chelsea where Dame Deborah was a patient.
Earlier this month William, who is President of The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, privately visited her at home in Woking, Surrey, where she has been discharged for home hospice care with her family.
Dame Deborah was diagnosed with bowel cancer in 2016 and has spent the last five years giving a candid account of her treatment via the You, Me and the Big C Podcast as well as raising more than £6 million for cancer research.
Speaking to patient Lorraine Kimber, 59, from Essex, who is currently undergoing treatment for pancreatic cancer and knows Mrs James well, the prince described his meeting with her.
‘She was incredible, incredible. She was surrounded by her family, we had a lovely afternoon,’ he said.
The Duke of Cambridge today praised ‘brilliant, brave and inspirational’ bowel babe Dame Deborah James as he met some of the staff who treated her
Earlier this month William, who is President of The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, privately visited Deborah at home in Woking, Surrey, where she has been discharged for home hospice care with her family
Mrs Kimber remarked that he had been able to help her ‘create some fantastic memories’.
William said: ‘You know she’s had over 100 tumours. Which is unbelievable. I couldn’t believe that. The resilience you have to have to keep going back again, it’s got to be very draining on you.’
Consultant Interventional Radiologist Dr Nicos Fotiadis, who also treated Dame Deborah, thanked William for going to see her at home as it sent a ‘powerful’ message. ‘You lead from the front and we are very happy about that,’ he told William.
The royal replied, slightly embarrassed at the praise: ‘No, no. It is important to acknowledge and recognise people like Deborah who do such an awful lot to help other people in very difficult circumstances. She’s done a brilliant job.’
William asked Mrs Kimber: ‘Tell me a bit more about what she has done for cancer. Obviously she’s been brilliant at raising the profile, as she put it she ‘made bowel cancer sexy’. Those are her words not mine.’
Mrs Kimber said: ‘She’s been am ambassador for everyone. She is amazing inside and out. We all have our own difficult cancer journeys and for her it’s been over five years, but she always, always took time out for other people. We go to meet literally in a chemotherapy clinic and we built our friendship through that. I saw first-hand the time she took for people. And going forward, what she has done is fantastic for the Marsden, fantastic for the cancer community and what a legacy we have. And she is still thinking of others even now. I have been honoured to call her a friend. It’s difficult now.
The Duke of Cambridge (left), 39, observed a robotic microwave ablation procedure at the Royal Marsden hospital in west London
‘The team here are incredible. It’s an absolute privilege to be a patient here. ‘
The prince was then introduced to the team of staff who treated her: chief nurse Mairead Griffin, deputy chief nurse Jo Waller and ward sister Rowena Trono.
He told them: ‘She was on amazing form when I saw her. ‘
‘She always is, she is always brightly dressed, always got her hair and make-up done. Doing tik toks with the staff and patients. And forever sitting outside in the sunshine to meet other patients. Waving at people outside. Just so positive,’ Ms Waller said.
‘She was here for a few months at the end and the main part of our goal was to get out and see her family. We tailored treatments so that she could get outside more and do that, Mother’s Day and things like that..’
Deborah (pictured) was honoured with a Damehood after raising millions of pounds for charity since last week as she revealed she was receiving end-of-life care
The former headteacher (pictured right, with children Eloise, 12, Hugo, 14 and husband Sebastien Bowen) was diagnosed with bowel cancer in 2016 and has kept her more than 500,000 Instagram followers up to date with her treatments
Prince William said he found it ‘very difficult’ speaking to Deborah’s children Hugo, 14, and daughter, Eloise, 12, during the visit last week
William said: ‘She was joking…because they are a very tight family, very close, you could see that….she was joking that at last she could now drink.
‘She said it was brilliant. She was ‘triple parked’ and kept on joking about how many drinks she could get lined up in front of her.
‘She’s realising that being at home is just where she wants to be right now, surrounded by all her loved ones. She spoke very eloquently and very knowledgably about all the cancer treatments, not just her own.
‘She has obviously done her research and was very passionate about making sure the money raised goes straight towards finding more treatments, speeding things up. She was very strong about that.
‘It’s amazing really in the world we live in that still talking openly and movingly about cancer is not as common as it should be. So many people are affected by cancer.
‘I love Deborah, she’s fantastic. Her legacy is massive. She said bowel cancer wasn’t a sexy as breast cancer, her words, but it’s true though.
Prince William (pictured) proved himself his mother’s son today when he observed a minimally-invasive treatment for cancer in medical scrubs – similar to Princess Diana’s appearance 26 years ago
‘There are so many cancers and some get a bit more publicity than others. And she wanted to make sure some of the less sexy, the less well-known cancers get more knowledge and understanding about them.
‘I was very honoured to be able to speak to her. It felt like a very personal family moment that I was there for. It was a glorious day as well. Thank you to you all for what you have done for her. She spoke very highly about her care. It was a touching moment. ‘
He added: ‘I met her children as well. It was very difficult talking to them about it but they seem to have been talking about the situation a lot.
‘That’s so important in those moment that the family talk and communicate about it and the children are brought into what is going on.
‘They seem like such a lovely family, the parents were there was well. It was such a very special moment, it really was. A lot of parents and families I can imagine don’t know how to brooch the subject.
‘It’s so difficult to talk about. But they were very open. I was asked lots of questions. It got me quite moved that they wanted to hear those answers, it was so open. Thank you so much for looking after her so well. She is a brave and inspirational woman.’
Speaking afterwards Ms Trono said she would never forget Deborah’s smile, which never faltered even at her darkest hours, and the time she gave to other patients. She recalled how she would put ‘out of office’ notes on her door to signal she had gone to speak to them.
Ms Griffin added: ‘People have always been so afraid to talk about cancer but she has turned that on its head. Her openness was key. ‘
The staff admitted it had been difficult to discharge her knowing she was leaving for end of life care and everyone on the medical team had been offered ‘debriefs’ with their psychological and wellbeing team.
‘It’s such a privilege to do this job, though, and help people make their life as fulfilling as possible,’ Ms Waller said.
She said of William’s visit: ‘He has such massive empathy and an ability to put people at ease. He’s always like that when he is hear, spending time on the wards speaking to people in no hurry to go. He really absorbs everything. His late mother was our patron and she was like that too.’
William also discussed the hospital’s revolutionary new microwave robotic treatment which destroys a tumour without removing it, so there are no scars or stitches, with Consultant Interventional Radiologist Dr Nicos Fotiadis, who also treated Dame Deborah and patient Mrs Kimber.
‘Honestly, I’ve had more difficult dentistry over the years,’ Mrs Kimber said.
‘The team make you feel at ease, the recovery time is pretty quick.’
The prince laughed, shocked, when she told him that she ‘had to confess’ to playing tennis two days after her surgery.
‘Seriously?’ exclaimed William. ‘You should never tell a doctor that! Say you are resting!’
Dr Fotiadis explained how the surgery was done under general anaesthetic as it is painful but that it is a ‘powerful’ tool in their armoury.
The prince then donned maroon scrubs and ‘overshoes’ to into theatre to witness live surgery known as robot-guided microwave ablation.
In his role as President of the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, William (pictured) visited the hospital’s facilities today to learn about some of the innovative work that is being carried out to improve cancer diagnosis and treatment
During his visit, Prince William also chatted to staff about the team’s morale during the coronavirus pandemic
He then watched a robotic microwave ablation, where a heat-generating probe is used to kill cancer cells
This type of interventional radiology uses energy from electromagnetic waves to heat and destroy advanced cancer via a tiny probe which is inserted into the patient through a tiny incision just one to two millimetres wide.
It decreases the time of the procedure, is more accurate and can access more difficult to target areas of the body. Dr Nicos described it as ‘game changing’. Robotic-guided ablation procedures are currently only available at The Royal Marsden.
After leaving the theatre William made his way outside of the hospital to The Royal Marsden’s ‘Man Van’, a mobile health clinic which is visiting workplaces and churches in London to improve healthcare access and the chance of early cancer diagnoses for men who are less likely to receive regular health checks.
Early diagnoses of prostate and other urological cancers is likely to increase the success of treatment.
The initiative, which was first launched in March this year, focusses on men of working age who often have worse prostate cancer outcomes, particularly those in manual jobs who can struggle to access healthcare, as well as men of Afro-Caribbean heritage who have roughly double the risk of developing prostate cancer.
William went inside the van to talk to Clinical Research fellow Dr Masood Moghul and Advanced Nurse Practitioner Fionnuala McCarthy.
William listened intently about their work, which starts with encouraging men to talk about their lifestyles and undergoing a simple blood test, saying: ‘The idea is to get ahead of the game and make it seem normal, it seems.
In 2018, it was reported that the Royal Marsden has the largest and most comprehensive programme of robotic surgery for cancer in the UK, treating urological, gynaecological, head and neck, gastrointestinal and colorectal patients. Pictured, Prince William today
The hospital has a poignant significance for William (pictured during his outing today) as it was the place Princess Diana visited on her first solo engagement in 1982
William (pictured right) became President of the Royal Marsden in 2007, taking over the Presidency from his mother who held the role from 1989 until her death in 1997
Father-of-three William (pictured during today’s visit) also observed surgeons in the operating theatre during a visit in 2018
The Duke of Cambridge speaks to staff as he visits The Royal Marsden hospital, pictured
A beaming Duke of Cambridge waves to staff during his visit to the London hospital today
‘Can you get your results here and now?
‘Some guys just bury things. They don’t walk to talk about them. ‘
And he joked that may be they could offer their clients a ‘free pint’. ‘Get them to have a pint and chat while they are waiting for their blood test.’
‘Funnily enough we have been trying for a while to get funding for a coffee machine,’ Dr Moghul told him
As he left William was cheered by crowds who had gathered on the street. He was just about the step into his car when he spotted staff on the steps of the hospital and rushed back to greet them and thank them for their work. One greeted him with a squeak of excitement.
The Royal Marsden opened its doors in 1851 as the world’s first hospital dedicated to cancer diagnosis, treatment, research and education.
Today, The Royal Marsden is a world-leading cancer centre specialising in cancer diagnosis, treatment, research and education with two hospitals, one in Chelsea and the other in Sutton, Surrey.
Princess Diana acted as patron to the charity from 1989 and paid the hospital in Chelsea regular visits until her death in 1997. In 1996, the Princess of Wales visited Harefield Hospital in Middlesex, where she too donned surgical clothing (pictured) to watch a heart operation on a small boy from Cameroon
Prince William proved himself his mother’s son today when he observed a minimally-invasive treatment for cancer in medical scrubs – similar to Princess Diana’s appearance 26 years ago.
In his role as President of the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, he visited the hospital’s facilities today to learn about some of the innovative work that is being carried out to improve cancer diagnosis and treatment.
Princess Diana acted as patron to the charity from 1989 and paid the hospital in Chelsea regular visits until her death in 1997.
In 1996, the Princess of Wales visited Harefield Hospital in Middlesex, where she too donned surgical clothing to watch a heart operation on a small boy from Cameroon.
The hospital has a poignant significance for William as it was the place Princess Diana visited on her first solo engagement in 1982.
William became President of the Royal Marsden in 2007, taking over the Presidency from his mother who held the role from 1989 until her death in 1997.
Today is not the first time that William has entered the operating theatre as he is believed to be the first royal to witness surgery at Marsden during a visit back in 2013.
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