
King Charles is sharing a rare update about his health. In a prerecorded message on Channel 4’s Stand Up To Cancer broadcast on Friday, the English monarch said he would reduce his cancer treatments in the New Year, People reported.
King Charles, who took over the throne after the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, in 2022, publicly shared that he was receiving cancer treatments in February 2024, less than a month after undergoing a procedure for an enlarged prostate. The type of cancer King Charles has has not been disclosed; however, Buckingham Palace stated that he does not have prostate cancer.
“This milestone is both a personal blessing and a testimony to the remarkable advances that have been made in cancer care in recent years; testimony that I hope may give encouragement to the fifty percent of us who will be diagnosed with the illness at some point in our lives,” he said in the prerecorded message on the broadcast.
King Charles also emphasized the importance of early detection, noting that more than 9 million people in the U.K. are not up to date on their cancer screenings. He said that learning of his cancer early on made a difference in his own journey and enabled him to “continue leading a full and active life, even while undergoing treatment.” He encouraged the use of a new national Screening Checker tool, which helps navigate U.K. residents through breast, bowel and cervical cancer screenings.
King Charles is not the only member of the Royal Family to undergo cancer treatment. In March 2024, Kate Middleton, known as Catherine, Princess of Wales, shared that she had abdominal surgery earlier that year, and that the operation found that “cancer had been present.”
“My medical team therefore advised that I should undergo a course of preventative chemotherapy and I am now in the early stages of that treatment,” she said at the time.
In a September 2024 Instagram post, the royal updated followers on her health journey, stating that she is finished with chemotherapy and that doing what she can to stay cancer-free is her focus. In January, she posted on X that her cancer is now in remission.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Air superiority and long-range strikes: what China's war games say about how it might assault Taiwan - 2
Vote In favor of Your Favored Language Interpretation Administration - 3
the 6 Shrewd Beds for seniors: A Complete Survey - 4
Top 5 Top of the line Books of the Year - 5
The 15 Most Powerful Forerunners in Business
Reconnecting with an old friend is a story of distance, loss and rediscovery
Nordic people know how to beat the winter blues. Here's how to find light in the darkest months
Drones haven't won the fight in Ukraine. That matters as the West learns new ways of war.
Novo Nordisk justifies reasoning behind failed GLP-1 Alzheimer's trials
Protester climbs on to balcony of Iranian embassy in London
Tributes pour in for MIT professor Nuno Loureiro amid unresolved shooting case
Avoid Slam: Clearing the Street for the Eventual fate of Standard Size Trucks
US EPA will reassess safety of herbicide paraquat, says its chief
Exploring the Difficulties of Beginning a Family: Individual Experiences













