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Survey for LGBTQ people affected by cancer launched

Macmillan Cancer Support and Brighton & Hove LGBT Switchboard are working together to engage with the local communities to learn about the experiences and needs of LGBTQ people in Brighton and Hove and Sussex who are affected by cancer.

This engagement work will be used to inform how LGBTQ people affected by cancer can be best supported; and to identify areas where improvements to patient experience can be made through Macmillan and in collaboration.

Switchboard has created two surveys as part of the project and would love to hear from as many people as possible.  One is for LBGTQ community members affected by cancer (including partners, carers and family members of people with cancer); the other is for professionals (including volunteers) supporting LGBTQ people affected by cancer.

Switchboard is also holding two focus groups to learn more about the experiences of these community members and professionals.  Take either of the surveys to receive details of the focus groups, or email: chris.brown@switchboard.org.uk

Daniel Cheesman
Daniel Cheesman

Daniel Cheesman, CEO of Brighton & Hove LGBT Switchboard, said: “Working with Macmillan on this project is really important for Switchboard as we know that LGBTQ people face additional barriers when it comes to accessing health care and support. We want to understand what this looks like for LGBTQ people who are affected by and living with cancer. We are keen to hear from those who identify as LGBTQ who have been affected by cancer.”

 

To complete the LGBTQ community members survey, click here:

To complete professionals supporting LGBTQ people survey, click here:

 

Every year, more than 10,000 people in the Sussex area find out they have cancer. There are at least 48,000 people living with cancer in Sussex, and the sad truth is, this number could increase to an estimated 93,000 by 20303.

One in two people in the UK are likely to get cancer in their lifetime. Cancer can affect everything, including a person’s body, relationships and finances.

Macmillan Cancer Support provides practical, emotional and personal support to people affected by cancer every year. The charity is there to support people during treatment, help with work and money worries, and listen when people need to talk about their feelings.

In 2016, there were around 200 Macmillan health and social care professional posts, often based at hospitals and in the community in Sussex, to support people with cancer and their families through difficult times. 2,000 people in the county phoned the Macmillan Support Line for information and support.  Macmillan mobile information buses were out and about in supermarkets, town centres, faith centres and workplaces in the Sussex area, visited by around 2,100 local people for support.

To help with money worries, around £1,460,400 in unclaimed benefits was unlocked for people in Sussex, and 620 people received Macmillan Grants, totalling over £215,000.5

Macmillan receives no government funding and relies on generous donations from the public. People up and down the country show their support for Macmillan – from hosting or attending a World’s Biggest Coffee Morning to running a marathon or giving up alcohol – so the charity can help more and more people affected by cancer every year.

Life with cancer is still your life and Macmillan is there to help you live it.

If you want information or just to chat, call 0808 808 00 00 (Monday to Friday, 9am–8pm) or visit www.macmillan.org.uk.

To get involved or make a donation please call 0300 1000 200. 

BOOK REVIEW: Wanting In Arabic by Trish Salah

Wanting In Arabic

Trish Salah

Canadian author Trish Salah’s poetry collection Wanting In Arabic is just into its second edition and if you’re unfamiliar with her work, I’d ask you politely to stop reading that twaddle on your phone and go get a copy of this creative, energetic and beautiful poetry.

Salah is clever, not just intelligent but has the fury of lightning in her work, and her lyric form is ancient and yet has an urgent vibrancy which is utterly modern and sexy with it. There’s a lot of sexy queer/lesbian eroticism in this work, but it squirms, writhes and boldly takes its stance just about anywhere the words can go. Salah is furious and gentle, shocking and so,so tender it moved me, and I felt I didn’t understand some of her work. Always a powerful tool of the poet, to draw you back to their lathe of meaning and whittle some more of your mind away with their sharp edged observations.

Braiding theoretical concerns with the ambivalences of sexed and raced identity, with profound romanticism, Wanting in Arabic attempts to traverse the fantasies of loss and aggressive nostalgia in order to further a poetics of generous struggle and comic rather than tragic misrecognition.

Beautiful and with sotto Canadian echos of Elizabeth Smart’s intertwining of spontanitey and propriety, of place and thought, the melding and moulding of words here feels plastic still, forming under the pins of our eyes but still wriggling to move and express again, Salah’s work is a subtle explosion of images and ideas that are compulsively interesting.

A treat!

Track down a copy if you can

LONDON: Equity LGBT History Month event presented by Rose Collis

The author, Rose Collis will present a new illustrated talk, Player Kings and Queens: Equity Founders and Friends in LGBT History, at a special LGBT History Month event for the entertainment union Equity.

Rose Collis
Rose Collis

Equity was formed in 1930 and its founding members included many major lesbian, gay and bisexual stage stars of the day, including Ivor Novello, John Gielgud and the union’s first female President Beatrix Lehmann.

The Sussex-based writer and performer, elected to Equity’s national LGBT+ Equalities Committee in June 2017, is best-known for her plays and books featuring real-life LGBT personalities, including Trouser-Wearing Characters, Not Wanted on Voyage and Wanting The Moon.

Rose explains: “I went to a training day for Equity’s new committee members and noticed the framed original founding document, and recognised some of the signatories. With my historian’s hat on, it struck me that they were part of a much wider lesbian and gay theatrical network, many of whom are also commemorated in St Paul’s Covent Garden, the ‘actors’ church’, including Noel Coward

“And, joining the dots even further, I noticed that they were all linked to one remarkable woman who presided over the ‘Tavistock Set’, just round the corner from Equity’s office and the church: the eccentric writer and artist Clemence Dane, subject of my solo play, Wanting The Moon. I realised that this would all make for a suitably entertaining LGBT History Month event, and I’m delighted that my Equity colleagues have wholeheartedly embraced the idea.”


Event: Player Kings and Queens, written and presented by Rose Collis

Where: Equity’s head office, Guild House, Upper St Martin’s Lane, London WC2H 9EG

When: Wednesday, February 28

Time: 6.30pm

Cost: Free and non-Equity members are welcome. Booking is recommended: tickets are available at:  https://www.eventbrite.com/e/player-kings-and-queens-equity-founders-and-friends-in-lgbt-history-tickets-41875646185

 

 

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