HEARTBREAK: Sky News presenter Dermot Murnaghan makes HEARTBREAKING ANNOUNCEMENT about final days of Critical Health

Former Sky News presenter Dermot Murnaghan has revealed he has been diagnosed with stage four cancer. The broadcaster admitted the devastating diagnosis came completely out of the blue while he was on holiday. Appearing on his former network, the 67-year-old urged men to “demand” a prostate cancer test and called on the government to implement active screenings.
In a candid conversation with presenter Anna Jones on Sky News, the dad-of-four revealed he’s “feeling pretty good” after undergoing chemotherapy. But he confessed that he didn’t exhibit typical prostate cancer symptoms in the lead up to his diagnosis.


Some of the typical symptoms that are signs of the d3adly disease include frequent urination or the presence of blood. Instead, he suffered a sudden illness while enjoying a holiday overseas, which led to the prognosis.
Murnaghan highlighted the lack of a formal screening programme in place for prostate cancer, insisting that men “actually have to ask for it rather than be offered it as so often happens with other cancers”.
Given the absence of a screening programme, he urged men of a certain age to proactively “go and demand it”. Reflecting on his own experience, the presenter admitted to putting off the screen.
He admitted: “In my own case, I fell through those gaps. I foolishly sat in your [points to presenter Anna Jones] position for many, many years speaking to people about this very issue.
“I talked about men, particularly over the age of 50, men in high-risk groups who may have a history if it in their family, to go and ask for this screening. And I kept thinking, ‘once I got over that age, I will go and do that’.
“I kept thinking, ‘Okay, well I’ll get round to it’, but life intervenes. Jobs, children, holidays… all kinds of things, and I never did. So what happened was at the end of last year, I fell very ill on a foreign holiday and kind of rushed back here to get treated by a wonderful health service and was diagnosed, a real bolt from the blue.”
After NHS treatment and testing, he was given the crushing diagnosis of stage-four cancer. Murnaghan highlighted that prostate-specific antigen (PSA) tests are becoming increasingly accurate and advocated for their inclusion in routine cancer screenings.
He said: “They might cost a little bit more money, but think about the money you save.” Urging men to undergo testing, he went on: “Once you cross that milestone, go and demand it, your GP will eventually give you one. If there’s a history of prostate cancer in your family, definitely get it.”
The broadcaster revealed that he completed his chemotherapy this summer. He explained: “I finished my chemotherapy kind of early July, so I’ve been recovering since. We’re just waiting to see how it’s gone. But I’m feeling pretty good.


“It’s hard, but the one thing is, you feel that you are actively doing something in the hands of wonderful medical professionals who know what they’re doing, and you’re kicking back, there’s this kind of bit of a psychological gap now that it’s stopped – ‘What do I do now?’ But I’m in the waiting-and-seeing phase, they can see how much it’s achieved hopefully.”
It comes as a coalition of over 60 cancer charities, known as One Cancer Voice, is sounding the alarm that the government must take immediate measures to address cancer care in England – including swifter diagnosis targets and improved prevention policies.
The UK lacks a national screening programme for prostate cancer as there isn’t a reliable test to detect cancer requiring treatment at an early stage, according to Cancer Research UK.
News
I watched my ex-husband’s engagement party stop breathing the second I walked in pregnant with triplets beside a man far more powerful than him.
You keep staring at Fernando Castillo’s photograph on the laptop screen long after the old fan in the rented room begins to rattle like loose bones in the ceiling. There is something almost offensive about how composed he looks in…
I saw a homeless man wearing my missing son’s jacket — and I decided to follow him.
The last time I saw Daniel, the house was full of morning light. It streamed through the tall kitchen windows in pale winter bands, illuminating the floating dust in the air and turning the steam from my coffee into…
My neighbor turned my garden into her dumpster—so I brought her a GIFT she’ll never forget.
People see the wheelchair before they see me. They always do. It rolls into view first—quiet, metal, practical. A machine that announces limitation before a man even opens his mouth. And once they’ve noticed it, everything else becomes secondary. My…
SIX WORDS IN A U.S. HEARING JUST REOPENED ONE OF AMERICA’S DARKEST UNANSWERED QUESTIONS.
The six woгds thɑt fгoze the гoom: Keппedy coгпeгs Boпdi oveг Epsteiп’s deɑth — ɑпd heг ɑпsweг oпly deepeпs the mysteгy A heɑгiпg гoom goes still It wɑs just six woгds. But iп thɑt pɑcked coпgгessioпɑl heɑгiпg гoom, they lɑпded…
He looked me in the eye, ordered me to erase my brother’s disaster, and expected me to say yes
PART 1 – The Table Already Set By the time Kesha Williams turned onto her parents’ block on the South Side, the sky had the color of old pewter, and the wind coming off the lake had sharpened into something…
THEY FORGOT I HAD ALREADY COUNTED EVERY DOLLAR THEY EVER TOOK FROM ME.
PART 1 – Immersive Opening & Emotional Hook By the time Kesha Williams turned onto her parents’ block on the South Side, dusk had already begun to settle over Chicago in that blue-gray way that made every house seem to…
End of content
No more pages to load