Bloating is something many of us experience, and we tend to treat it as an inconvenient side effect of eating too much. But according to research carried out previously by, 50% of women who suffer regular bloating are dismissing is as normal, and fail to seek medical advice as a result - even though it's actually a key
What's more, with the current coronavirus pandemic playing out, statistics show that less people are seeking medical advice over potential cancer symptoms. Inwritten by oncologist Professor Karol Sikora, he estimated that in any usual April, we would see approximately 30,000 people diagnosed with cancer.
According to Target Ovarian Cancer's 2018 research, women are more likely to try eating probiotic yoghurts or amending their diets in a bid to stop rather than heading to their GP. 'A probiotic yoghurt should not be preventing a woman from visiting the GP promptly if something is worrying her,' the charity's chief executive Annwen Jones said at the time.
It was only months later, when nothing she tried made any difference and her symptoms worsened, that Fiona sought advice from a doctor and received a diagnosis of ovarian cancer.
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