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Posts with tag jude
Posted Sep 7th 2007 7:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Childhood Cancers

How are children surviving cancer today? Better than ever before. Some childhood cancer patients, now in their young adult years, are expecting to reach milestones in their lives others before them never would have reached.
Today, 1 in 1,000 young adults in the United States is a childhood cancer survivor. In the 1970s, the chance a child would outlive leukemia or lymphoma was 25 percent. Today, it's 80 percent. That's better than most adult recovery rates.
As recovery rates rise, a new frontier is on the horizon -- follow-up for these young people as they age. You see, the very treatments that saved these individuals may cause them complications later in life. It's not yet clear what happens when kids live 20 to 30 years beyond diagnosis. But teams at
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, plan to find out as they launch one of the most ambitious follow-up programs to date. Contacting 5,000 patients who have survived for more than 10 years, doctors hope they will recruit a group to receive free check-ups for life. They'll also receive blood tests, MRI scans, even fertility counseling. Their medical histories will serve as rich textbooks for medical professionals and future patients -- so the war on childhood cancer can continue.
Posted Jun 26th 2007 7:00PM by Kristina Collins
Filed under: Childhood Cancers, Clinical Trials, Research, Cancer Survivors, Surgery
When researching children's hospitals and oncology programs, you should have a list of questions that are relevant to the child's cancer. The same questions should be asked at each hospital so you can compare answers and make an informed decision about where to seek treatment.
Some questions include:
- What clinical trials are available?
- What type of research is going on for this type of cancer?
- What are the success rates?
- How many of these type of cancer cases do you see each year?
- Have you treated a child with this type of cancer?
- What cancers do you specialize in?
- Do you offer support groups?
- Do you allow family-centered care which allows families to be part of the treatment plan?
Pediatric cancer care is much different than cancer treatments in adults, many parents decide to go to a children's hospital like St. Jude's for care. Whatever the choice, make sure that you are getting the best possible care for the child as you can. Since you are their voice and their advocate, you have to do what you can to make sure that you are giving them the best opportunity to fight and beat childhood cancer.
Posted Nov 21st 2006 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Childhood Cancers, Fundraisers

If you plan to send out photo holiday cards this season, consider supporting the youngest of cancer patients at the same time.
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital and
Target have teamed up and are offering customers the chance to order from four 4X8 holiday card options. Each option was designed by one of four patients currently receiving treatment at St. Jude's -- the only children's hospital treating patients regardless of their ability to pay.
Designers include Christina, 11, who is busy fighting acute myeloid leukemia; Genesis, 8, and Samantha, 14, who are both battling osteosarcoma; and Jake, 4, who is trying to conquer heptoblastoma. One-hundred percent of all profits go directly to St. Jude.
This St. Jude and Target partnership was formed to support St. Jude's
Thanks and Giving program -- a national endeavor that encourages customers to honor the healthy children in their lives by giving to those who are not.
You can place your St. Jude holiday card order through
Yahoo! Photos.
Posted Oct 24th 2006 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Childhood Cancers, Fundraisers, Products

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.
Posted Sep 4th 2006 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Childhood Cancers, Cancer events, Research, Events, Fundraisers

Chili's restaurant is the place to be on September 25 -- because 100 percent of profits earned on this day will go to
St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital -- the only hospital for sick children that does not require anyone to pay for treatment. So fundraising is key -- and Chili's has cooked up all sorts of creative ways to help conquer cancer in children.
Besides
Donate All Our Profits Day, Chili's is sponsoring a program called
Creativity for a Cause -- where customers make a donation and then color a rendering of a pepper. The coloring sheets are displayed at participating restaurants in a chain-like fashion, hanging from the ceilings.
Create a Pepper gift cards are also available. For every $25 spent on gift cards, Chili's will donate $1 to St. Jude's. And t-shirts -- black with a white pepper gracing the front -- can be purchased for $12. Kids can even have fun
on-line with Chili's crafty creations, including an interactive pepper coloring activity.
All this fundraising goes hand in hand with the development of the
Chili's Care Center -- a St. Jude's state-of-the-art building dedicated to groundbreaking research on brain tumors. The center is scheduled to open in Fall 2007 -- thanks to Chili's professionals who over the course of 10 years have donated a historic $50 million to St. Jude's.
Posted Jun 23rd 2006 4:30PM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Childhood Cancers, Celebrity spokesperson, Research

I just received in the mail my
Certificate of Completion for St. Jude's Campaign for a Cure. I have never really known much about
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital -- except that I can be brought to tears by the television specials that showcase sick children whose lives depend on the research and treatment that this hospital offers. But I came to know more about St. Jude this year after a friend asked me to make a donation for the
Up 'til Dawn program he sponsors on the college campus where he works -- a program that involves more than 150 college campuses nationwide and partners faculty, staff, students, and communities in an extravaganza of activity, education, and fundraising to benefit the children at St. Jude. So I made a donation and then was contacted by St. Jude with an invitation to help them further -- and I did. I sent out 10 pre-written letters to friends and family asking for their support. I was given an attainable fundraising goal. And I met it. So this is why I received my certificate -- and some cheery address labels too.
Continue reading Partnership with St. Jude's saves children sick with cancer