As a leading North West health care provider, Circle Health Group (CHG) knows that two in three people in the north west will suffer from a skin condition during their lifetime. This is why, for the second year running, they have donated £10,000 to British Skin Foundation’s (BSF) skin research programme. CHG’s continued support of the BSF’s work is already making a huge impact.

Melanoma skin cancer is the fifth most common cancer in the UK and it’s on the rise. Projections suggest there will be 26,500 new cases every year by 2040. Last year’s donation is now supporting an important melanoma project that is looking to develop better methods for early detection of the potentially deadly skin cancer.

Advertisement Advertisement Sign up to our daily newsletter Did you know with an ad-lite subscription to Lancaster Guardian, you get 70% fewer ads while viewing the news that matters to you. Leeds Beckett researcher, Dr Jaskaren Kohli, will be aiming to give healthcare professionals more tools to catch melanoma in its early stages, when it is easier to treat, and patients are more likely to survive. He will look for better biomarkers in moles, black skin lesions which can develop into the deadly cancer if left unchecked.

This research has the potential to improve the quality of life for patients not just in the UK, but worldwide in the future. Adam Busby, Group Clinical Director at Circle Health Group said: “The British Skin Foundation are at the forefront of research i.