HDC 2010 for TeamConnor
What is "Team Connor"
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It was a day that the entire family would remember forever, the day they heard from the doctor, “Your son has cancer.”Connor was diagnosed with Neuroblastoma which is one of the most common solid tumors of early childhood usually found in babies or young children. Most patients, including Connor, have a widespread disease at diagnosis, with a dismal prognosis of 30% survival. Connor underwent two autonomous stem cell transplants, numerous surgeries, and almost constant chemotherapy beginning immediately following that one dreadful day. He received treatment in Dallas, Boston, New York, Houston, and Guatemala. Joy and Tait spend four years of frantic searching for any treatment that would arrest this disease. There were no special experts guiding them. They were faced with making numerous crucial decisions concerning Connor’s medical care. They did their own research and phoned other parents who had children with Neuroblastoma in order to find trials and experimental treatments that might save little Connors life. Despite the heroic efforts of his parents and Connor’s fighting spirit, Connor lost his battle with Neuroblastoma on July 10, 2009. For our most vulnerable, blameless cancer victims, this is unacceptable. That is why the Team Connor Cancer Foundation was formed. Most pediatric cancer treatments have NOT improved much in the past 20 years. How can progress be made with the dismal amount of attention and funding that pediatric cancer research receives? Today, there are many children like Connor. Children and families that have exhausted their standard treatment protocol and were not cured of cancer. More dollars means more research and more treatments available for children with cancer, ultimately finding the cure. With your help, we can help to make the greatest impact possible on a child, saving their life! Please help us to find the cures to all childhood cancers! All donations are tax-deductible. |
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Their Mission Statement, "Through effective and efficient use of resources, TeamConnor will raise awareness, support families, fund treatments, and help find a cure for childhood cancer."
Cancer is the number one disease killer of children and kills more
children per year than cystic fibrosis, muscular dystrophy, asthma and
AIDS combined, yet the budget of the National Cancer Institute
allocates only 3% of its funds to pediatric cancer research.
There are 15 cases of pediatric cancer diagnosed for every single
case of pediatric AIDS and yet the U.S. spends $595,000 for research
per victim of pediatric AIDS, yet only $20,000 per victim of pediatric
cancer.
The largest children’s oncology group in North America, which supports the clinical and biological research at over 200 participating institutions and treats 90% of children with cancer, received less than half of its requested budget from the federal government this year.