"I think this is the best compliment I've ever had," the photographer commented.
Based on the study results and that level of uptake, using the different scanning techniques on women with very dense breasts could identify 3,500 extra cancers per year and potentially save 700 lives.Prof Fiona Gilbert, who led the research, said she was convinced the new approach could make a difference.
"We need to change our national screening programme so we can make sure more cancers are diagnosed early, giving many more women a much better chance of survival."The Department of Health and Social Care said its screening advisory body had been looking at ways to improve detection rates in women with very dense breasts for a number of years.It said it would be reviewing the findings of this trial, but it was determined to "fight cancer on all fronts" to improve survival rates.
A new national cancer plan for England is expected to be published later this year.Lorraine Kelly's morning show on ITV will be cut from an hour to 30 minutes as more than 220 jobs across the station's daytime output are expected to be cut, the broadcaster has announced.
From January 2026, Good Morning Britain (GMB) will be extended by half an hour to fill the gap, running from 06:00 to 09.30 daily.
Lorraine, which currently runs for almost the entire year, will now only air for 30 weeks out of 52, with GMB extended by 30 minutes during the weeks Lorraine is not on air, until 10:00.Jackie Adams (not her real name), who works in digital marketing, resisted AI initially on environmental grounds, and because she thought using it was lazy.
"I heard about the energy needed to power data centres and the amount of land they take up, and it didn't sit right with me. I didn't understand why we needed it," she says.However, about a year ago her three colleagues at the marketing firm she works for started adopting AI, for tasks such as copywriting and idea generation.
Six months ago Ms Adams had to follow them, after being told she had to cut her budget."Then it was out my control," she says. She feels that continuing to resist would have hurt her career.