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21st December 2021
02:12pm GMT

"Saving lives is of course the number one goal but on the other side, I only got four weeks. If I can give someone six months, two years, three years, if I can give someone more time than I had, that'll be a success as well."
John Paul is now planning on returning to Ireland from Perth with his two children, where he will campaign for increased cancer screening.
John Paul set up the Susan Ricken Foundation in honour of his late wife, and he plans to send letters to both the Australian and Irish Governments calling for them to change the criteria for bowel cancer screening so that people aged 30 and over and pregnant women are included.
"One thing I can do is talk," John said. “I can spread the word and I’m willing to do everything I can. I don’t have a college degree, I’m not a computer geek but what I can do is I have the ability to talk."
According to the HSE, bowel cancer is the third most common cancer in women and the second most common cancer in men. As it stands, the BowelScreen programme is available to people aged between 60 and 69, though there are plans to extend it to people between the ages of 55 and 74.
For more information on bowel cancer, head to the HSE's website right here.Explore more on these topics:

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