
A pioneering strategy is set to revolutionise care for thousands of people living with metastatic cancer in Greater Manchester, giving them the support and voice they’ve long deserved.
The new strategy – a UK and NHS first – sets out a bold vision to transform care for people living with metastatic disease, ensuring earlier diagnosis, joined-up care and the personalised support they need to live well for longer.
Jo Taylor, a pivotal supporter of the Greater Manchester Cancer Alliance Metastatic Cancer strategy, sadly passed away before the strategy launched, but her legacy lives on.
Jo Taylor was one of many people affected by metastatic cancer who supported the development of the strategy with the Greater Manchester Cancer Alliance.
She realised firsthand after being diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer in 2014 how metastatic support and data was lacking, so spearheaded the movement for a dedicated strategy for metastatic disease.
Jo sadly died just three weeks before the metastatic strategy launched, but her legacy lives on through it and the continued work to improve metastatic cancer care.
The strategy builds on Greater Manchester’s track record of innovation and collaboration. For Paul, it’s about hope that his experience can make a difference. He said:
“I can’t change what’s happened to me, but if this strategy helps even one person avoid what I went through, then it’s worth it.”





