Displaying 101 - 110 of 250
Haley Zora - What this journey has taught me
Updated:
Haley Zora lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia after moving there with her husband, Fabian, from Regina, Saskatchewan. She finished chemotherapy for Hodgkin’s lymphoma five years ago on July 27th, 2015.
Living and thriving through a blood cancer experience
Updated:
LLSC is the largest voluntary health agency dedicated to funding blood cancer research, advocating for equitable access to treatment, and offering support
Bob Sisler
Updated:
“You have angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma” my oncologist told me on November 3, 2014. He went on to say that my type of lymphoma had a five-year survival rate of 30% and that this type of cancer was rare, very aggressive and difficult to treat.
Lindsay Thompson
Updated:
My world changed the day I whacked my elbow on a table at work. This is how leukemia snuck into my life – coincidentally, totally unexpectedly, lurking in the background until you have an annual physical, need surgery or, in my case, whack your elbow.
Marie France
Updated:
Cancer comes and goes as it pleases. It affects so many people, but you never expect it to reach you, much less one of your children. But in my case, that is exactly what happened.
Scott Leone
Updated:
In the spring of 2010, my daughter Isabella wasn’t herself. She was pale, she wasn’t active, and wasn’t eating much. We originally thought she was just teething because she was a little over one and half years old.
Research Champions
Updated:
Research Champions are individuals who made an exceptional contribution to the blood cancer community.
They are people who want to see cures for blood cancers in our lifetime and will stop at nothing to make it happen.
They are people who want to see cures for blood cancers in our lifetime and will stop at nothing to make it happen.
Physician Scientist Fellow Award
Updated:
The intent of the Physician Scientist Fellow Award is to encourage early-stage specialist clinicians to pursue a career in blood cancer research.
Who we are
Updated:
We won’t stop until there is a cure for leukemia, lymphoma, myeloma, myelodysplastic syndromes and myeloproliferative neoplasms and are able to improve the quality of life of people affected by blood cancers and their families by funding life-enhancing research and providing…