A GOALKEEPER at Clydebank Football Club has spoken out about the death of his sister in the hope of helping others.

Scott Morrison, 38, lost his big sister Lisa to cervical cancer in 2012, when she was just 34 years old.

On Monday, Clydebank FC posted a video of Scott sharing Lisa’s story and how the events worker went through two rounds of chemotherapy and radiotherapy before the family were told there was nothing else that could be done.

Scott told the Post: “Unfortunately, Lisa’s story wasn’t a happy ending, but [the video] is to help raise awareness that the earlier cancer is caught the better – that’s the main reason.

“David Brockett, the club’s media manager, approached me a couple of weeks ago and asked if I’d be happy to tell Lisa’s story.

“The answer was easy – if her story could help anybody then go for it.”

In the video, posted during Cervical Cancer Prevention Week (January 20-26 ), Scott explains that Lisa was diagnosed in September 2010, despite diligently attending regular check-ups.

He added: “I think as an individual and as a family you hear that word [cancer] and you panic.”

In October, 2010, Lisa started her cancer treatment – both chemotherapy and radiotherapy.

Read more: 'She fought to the end': Clydebank mum-of-five passed away before final wish

Scott said: “She got a battering, a real battering. Anyone who has been in that situation with a family member or a loved one will know it’s a hard watch.

“She lost all her hair, all her weight. She was struggling to do normal, day-to-day functions because she was so ill.”

Lisa was forced to leave the flat that she lived in on her own and move back in with her mum and dad, who helped her "physically, mentally and financially" as she was unable to work.

After her treatment, Lisa moved back into her own flat, and everything started to get a bit more positive. She had started back work, her hair was growing back and she even got it cut.

But after only a few months, the family were hit with the dreaded news that her treatment hadn’t worked.

Scott said: “The caner was still there, and it was going to have to happen all over again. She knew, and we knew, what was coming. It was harder this time I think, because you knew it wasn’t going well.

“On January 31, 2012, she was admitted to the Royal in Glasgow and never made it out. Within a week we were told it was terminal. There was nothing else they could do and on February 19, she passed away.

“As a family it was really really difficult. We’re not the first family to deal with something like this and unfortunately were not ever going to be the last.

“But if Lisa’s story and Clydebank Football Club can raise awareness and a few more women go and get themselves checked, then it can only be a good thing.”