Listen to the Joystiq Podcast (because your ears can't read)

Note: The contents of this blog are for informational purposes only and should not be construed as medical advice or substitute for professional care. For medical emergencies, dial 911!

Posts with tag couple

Couple collects 32 million pennies for cancer care center

How many of us value the worth of a penny?

Twenty years ago, Peter and Bette Pickstock, from a village in Sturdivant near Cheltenham, England, thought pennies might one day add up to make a difference and thus began the collection of pennies.

Two decades later, and 32 million pennies total (nearly $700,000 dollars), the couple recently donated the money to the Cobalt Appeal Fund in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, a cancer care center.

The Queen of England was impressed, as Peter and Bette Pickstock were invited to Buckingham Palace to meet Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip. Although the couple could not have known this twenty years ago when they decided to do something good for others in the simple act of collecting pennies, two years ago Mrs. Pickstock was diagnosed with breast cancer and learned firsthand how much a cancer care center can help cancer patients. They said they plan to continue collecting pennies.

Ozzy Osbourne terrified by wife Sharon's cancer diagnosis

Rock legend Black Sabbath Ozzy Osbourne spoke about his wife Sharon's colon cancer diagnosis during a recent interview with Hello! magazine, in which he is quoted as saying, "When I found out it was like someone had got a slab of concrete and hit me with a big dose of reality. I thought cancer plus patient equals death. The thought of losing her was more than I could bear."

In 2002, the entire Osbourne family appeared in a MTV reality show The Osbournes. During the taping, Sharon was diagnosed with colon cancer. Rather than cancel the show, she agreed to share the experience of chemotherapy and cancer survivorship with the viewers to help raise awareness for cancer.

Osbourne said that while he is always happy for the professional success his wife enjoys with such shows as the U.K. talent show X Factor and The Sharon Osbourne Show, he misses the time away from her.

Ozzy has designed a limited-edition signature series t-shirt for the Hard Rock Cafe, with profits from the sale of the t-shirts to benefit the Sharon Osbourne Colon Cancer Program. The cancer charity offers colonoscopies and screenings to people without medical insurance, as well as those with minimal coverage, transportation to chemotherapy for patients and nursing consultation to those in need of assistance with their aftercare.

Now a four-year colon cancer survivor, Sharon's life philosophy is simple: "live everyday to the fullest, and don't save for tomorrow what you can do today." Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne are featured on the cover of the February 2007 issue of Hello! magazine.

Sick children at St. Jude create hopeful holiday gifts

The kids at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital keep busy getting better. They keep busy making holiday gifts too -- like ornaments and ceramic plates and holiday cards and gift wrap. All of their hand-crafted creations fill the 2006 St. Jude Holiday Hope Gift Book, available now and jam-packed with powerful gifts of hope.

Proceeds from gift purchases -- 84 percent of each sale -- benefit sick children in every community in every country who come to St. Jude for life-saving treatment. Like Caleb, a seven-year-old boy diagnosed in 2004 with leukemia.

Caleb was referred to St. Jude -- where no family is ever turned away because of an inability to pay -- and received treatment for three years. Caleb is now in remission and expresses his feelings through his artwork.

Anna Grace, a five-year-old who was abandoned on a roadside in China when she was one day old, was adopted by an American couple and soon after was diagnosed with a cancerous tumor on her brain stem. After surgery to remove the tumor, Anna Grace was referred to St. Jude for chemotherapy and radiation. Today, Anna Grace is healthy and only returns for check-ups every six months.

St. Jude stories of hope are plentiful. And so are the kid-created holiday gifts offered this season.

Couples consciously select embryos with low cancer risk

Chloe is a little girl conceived through in vitro fertilization -- not because her parents could not conceive in the traditional manner but because they wanted to make sure Chloe had no predisposition to cancer in her genetic makeup. And in vitro fertilization is one method of almost ensuring this. There is still a three percent chance of failure but Chloe's parents felt confident in the elective process that would mostly prevent her from inheriting a genetic mutation for colon cancer that has devastated her family -- Chloe's father carries this mutation, and his mother, grandfather, and two uncles have all died from colon cancer.

A growing number of couples are using preimplantation genetic makeup to detect a predisposition to cancers that may or may not develop later in life. Using this procedure, parents subject their tiny embryos to genetic tests to determine whether or not they harbor defective genes. Essentially, parents get to pick and choose from embryos in a petri dish which one they want. Since the embryo that became Chloe did not test positive for any defective genes, she was the chosen one. And she is now a healthy two-year-old girl.

It's an ethical minefield -- this scientific creation of human life and the picking and choosing of which embryos will survive and which ones will not. One expert says the issue centers around what is considered serious enough to warrant such testing -- and who gets to make this decision. Ethical dilemmas surrounding this issue will only continue to grow as more and more options become available. Already embryos are tested for predisposition for obesity and deafness and a mild skin condition. Some clinics even screen for gender. Some fear this practice may lead to a genetic class divide where the wealthy will become more genetically pure than the poor -- because this process is difficult and expensive, costing tens of thousands of dollars without insurance coverage.

Chloe's parents are happy they made the choice they did. Her father says he doesn't know if he could handle being told his daughter has cancer -- especially with the knowledge that he could have prevented it.

ESPN wedding honors sports, cancer survival

One lucky couple was chosen -- from a pool of more than 450 couples who competed in ESPN's Marriage Madness competition -- as winner of the ultimate ESPN sports wedding. With listeners of the Mike & Mike in the Morning national TV and radio show as voters, Catherine and Jason West, now husband and wife, were married May 26, 2006 on ESPN. Noteworthy is the fact that both Catherine and Jason are die-hard University of Florida Gator fans -- they met at a Gator tailgating party and were engaged at Lake Alice, a popular outdoor spot on campus. The bride wore crystal Gator beadwork on her gown and the groom's tuxedo jacket was lined in Gator orange. The maid of honor wore a Gator blue dress and carried an orange bouquet. The wedding vows included the traditional messages of love, honor, and respect -- but some sports twists were sprinkled in too. The Wests took away a check for $20,000, compliments of hosts Mike Greenberg and Mike Golic, and they will soon head off on an all-expense paid sports-inspired honeymoon.

This wedding is inspired not just by sports.  It is also inspired by cancer survival. Catherine -- who became engaged on the one-year anniversary of her first breast cancer surgery -- is now in full cancer remission. And a $2,500 donation was made in the couple's name to the V Foundation, a cancer fund in memory of Jim Valvano, a former North Carolina State basketball coach and ESPN broadcaster. This is surely an event to remember.

For cancer survivors it's never too late for love

Healthy single people can have moments where they anguish over the prospect that love is passing them by -- that it is too late -- that they are never going to meet that special person to spend the rest of their life. Cancer survivors tend to worry about this more, wondering if anyone can love them after the damage cancer has done to their body and their life. For all the forlorn who feel hope for love is lost, I have a story for you. In England's Isle of Wight County Press, is a feature story that makes you realize that hope is eternal, and there is no way of knowing what the future might hold in promise and bliss.

Una Seccull, 80, is a three-time cancer survivor, who was told at one time she only had hours to live. Ken Stotesbury, 84, is a prostate cancer survivor. This weekend the two will be married, with 70 family members and friends in attendance. Two years ago they met while being treated for cancer. When Una was too weak to care for herself, Ken suggested that she move in with him, so they could look after each other. Romance blossomed. Look at that photo! If a picture is worth a thousand words, then this photo says love a thousand times. What a beautiful couple! I was wondering if I had an Easter post, and I think I just found it in this one. Life just doesn't get any better than this story.

Photo credit: Georgia Russell -- Isle of Wight County Press

Cancer Fundraisers
 (0)
Cancer events (141)
Pink products (63)
Celebrities
Celebrity cancer diagnosis (73)
Celebrity fundraisers (83)
Celebrity in memoriam (75)
Celebrity news (173)
Celebrity spokesperson (46)
Features
Form and Function (7)
Today, I Am Grateful (10)
Worthy Wisdom (21)
RetroReview (6)
Saturday Six (4)
Sunday Seven (64)
Survivor Spotlight (40)
Cancer by the Numbers (17)
Recipe Healthy Living (52)
Healing Attitude Almanac (6)
Thought for the Day (148)
Media
Blogs (144)
Books (109)
Magazines (51)
Movies (21)
Products (154)
Services (116)
Sports (20)
Television (101)
Video games (4)
Meet the Bloggers
Bloggers (13)
Jacki Donaldson (2)
Kristina Collins (1)
Diane Rixon (1)
Nine DeJanvier (1)
Chris Sparling (1)
Allie Beatty (1)
Dalene Entenmann (1)
News
Daily news (684)
Events (85)
Fundraisers (169)
Opinion (170)
Politics (145)
Research (799)
Prevention
Cancer prevention foods (170)
Diets (213)
Environment (115)
Exercise (94)
Non-toxic alternatives (35)
Nutrition (131)
Obesity (52)
Smoking (101)
Stress Reduction (91)
Vitamins and nutrients (90)
Treatment
Alternative Therapies (411)
Cancer Caregivers (71)
Cancer Pre-vivors (21)
Cancer Survivors (469)
Chemotherapy (495)
Clinical Trials (160)
Drug (497)
Hospice (18)
Prevention (1327)
Radiation (77)
Stem Cell (25)
Surgery (40)
Types of Cancer
 (0)
All Cancers (820)
Anal cancer (2)
Animal (18)
Bladder Cancer (39)
Blood Cancer (18)
Bone Cancer (15)
Brain Cancer (106)
Breast Cancer (1324)
Cervical Cancer (72)
Childhood Cancers (204)
Colon and Rectal Cancer (235)
Endometrial Cancer (25)
Esophageal Cancer (35)
Eye Cancer (6)
Gallbladder Cancer (2)
Gastric cancer (5)
Germ Cell Tumors (1)
Head and Neck cancer (13)
Hodgkin's Lymphoma (55)
Kidney Cancer (56)
Leukemia (145)
Liver Cancer (50)
Lung Cancer (273)
Melanoma (105)
Mouth Cancer (42)
Multiple Myeloma (13)
Neuroblastoma (1)
Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma (56)
Oral Cancer (16)
Ovarian Cancer (154)
Pancreatic Cancer (78)
Pet Cancers (11)
Pregnancy and cancer (6)
Prostate Cancer (233)
Rectal Cancer (3)
Sarcoma (8)
Skin Cancer (153)
Stomach Cancer (28)
Teen Cancers (26)
Testicular Cancer (17)
Throat Cancer (20)
Thymic Cancer (0)
Thyroid Cancer (49)
Tissue Cancers (1)
Tongue Cancer (3)
Unknown Primary (2)
Uterine Cancer (9)
Womb Cancer (1)
Young Adult Cancers (104)

RESOURCES

RSS NEWSFEEDS

Powered by Blogsmith

Other Weblogs Inc. Network blogs you might be interested in: