3 bowel bears with Mike Peters of The Alarm at Generation Records in New York

April is bowel cancer awareness month, and I intend to do what I can to help raise awareness about bowel cancer. The very special Stop Bowel Cancer Teddy Bear is helping to raise awareness and also funds for Bowel Cancer UK. You can buy a bear right here.

Take your teddy with you to all your favourite places, and then take a photo to raise awareness. I have received photos from all over over the world from as away as Australia and New Zealand. In a time when travel is difficult there are still so many interesting laces on our doorstep to take a photo with the bear.

The bears were launched in October 2018 and the support for them has been incredible. There are currently well over a hundred in existence. I was quite lucky that while I was completing my last fundraising book, I was able to take my bear to the meetings with some famous people who were all great sports having photo taken with the bear. I took the bear to New York and to concerts here in the UK. I had also started visiting football grounds, which has of course sadly been curtailed due to Covid-19. The opportunities with the bear are endless.

Kim Wilde with Charlie #bowelbear

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The bears are a fun way of raising awareness about bowel cancer, but having lost my mum to this awful disease I know all too well how devastating it can be.

The basic facts are that bowel cancer is the 2nd biggest cancer killer in the UK, and 42,000 people are diagnosed with it each year, and it claims 16,000 lives. Around 268,000 people in the UK are living with bowel cancer.

If diagnosed early at stage 1, 90% of cases can be treated successfully, whereas the figure falls to just 7% at stage 4. At the moment only 15% of cases are detected at stage 1. It is vital that early diagnosis rates are improved if survival rates are to improve. Whilst it is more common to affect people over 50, it is increasingly affecting younger people. 



The symptoms can include a persistent change in bowel habit, bleeding from the bottom, abdominal pain, a lump in your tummy, and unexplained weight loss and tiredness.

Risk factors include a high intake of saturated fats, processed or red meat. Drinking more than 4 units of alcohol per day, being overweight, and having an immediate relative with bowel cancer all could increase the chances of being affected by it.

To reduce the risk eat or healthy diet with plenty of fruit, regular exercise to reduce weight, cut down on alcohol, and be aware of any change in bowel habits. My mum recognised a change in her bowel habit and when she was sent to have an endoscopy the bowel cancer was discovered. She lived with stage 4  bowel cancer for four and a half years before she died in August 2016.

By raising awareness about bowel cancer we can share the message that bowel cancer, bums and poo are nothing to be embarrassed about, and learning the symptoms and acting on them could save lives.

If just one person gets checked out and has their life saved as a result of this month’s raising awareness then the efforts become so worthwhile.