Showing posts with label Addario. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Addario. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 4, 2019

Lung Cancer matters, too.

Nobody deserves it.  And, you do not have to smoke to get it. Lung cancer kills more people than breast, prostate, colon, liver, kidney, and melanoma cancers combined. ​Yet, it receives a small fraction of the ​attention and research funding.  Help fight to change this!

How? By supporting my dear friends at the GO2 Foundation for Lung Cancer.
Check out the latest lung cancer facts...
Click on the image for the complete fact sheet.

And read about lung cancer's unique impact on women here...
Click on the image for the complete fact sheet.

This information may save a life.

Monday, April 8, 2019

Learn more about the new GO2 Foundation on April 16th!

Learn more about this exciting merger next Tuesday, April 16th at the monthly Lung Cancer Living Room.

GO2 Foundation for Lung Cancer co-founders Laurie Fenton Ambrose and Bonnie Addario will share more about how the union of these two leading-edge lung cancer organizations came together and what their plans are for the future!

All the details, including how you can watch the live-stream, are HERE.

Click here to view the flyer.

The Nation’s Leading Lung Cancer Organizations Join Forces to Launch “GO2 Foundation for Lung Cancer"

Merger combines more than thirty years of patient-centered expertise to Empower Everyone, Ignore No One.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE April 8, 2019

(San Carlos, CA and Washington, DC) – Two of the most effective and influential nonprofit organizations serving the lung cancer community, the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation (ALCF) and Lung Cancer Alliance (LCA) today proudly announced they are joining forces as the GO2 Foundation for Lung Cancer. Together they become the “go-to” local and global force serving and advocating for the needs of the millions of people who are vulnerable, at risk or diagnosed, and all others impacted by or impacting the disease.


“We are thrilled to blend our talent, resources, commitment and compassion to create this powerhouse foundation,” said Bonnie J. Addario, lung cancer survivor, Co-Founder and Chair of the Board of Directors of the GO2 Foundation for Lung Cancer, and most recently Founder and Chair of ALCF. “The GO2 Foundation will transform what it means to live with lung cancer and increase the patient survival rate of the world’s number one cancer killer annually. Together we will continue to break barriers and save lives.”

With more than three decades of combined expertise, a shared “patients-first” philosophy and complementary programming, the GO2 Foundation for Lung Cancer launches with principal offices in the San Francisco Bay Area and Washington, DC. GO2 Foundation will be maximizing resources and staff expertise, integrating and growing networks to reach and support more people, expanding patient- centered research, and amplifying awareness of the steep challenges and needs facing the lung cancer community.

“We are on the cusp of early detection and treatment breakthroughs that will forever alter the future of the disease,” said Laurie Fenton Ambrose, Co-Founder, President and CEO of GO2 Foundation, and most recently President and CEO of LCA. “We are seizing this moment to harness this energy and build greater capacity to reach more people with life-saving benefits, personalized care and comprehensive services that fulfill our credo to ‘Empower Everyone, Ignore No One.’”

GO2 Foundation priorities include:

  • Serving the at risk, patient and caregiver communities through professional, credible, free patient-support services that include personalized screening, treatment and clinical trial navigation, molecular testing, peer-to-peer mentoring, and support forums;
  • Advancing world class academic, community and patient-centered research that spans the continuum of care for lung cancer detection, treatment and survivorship;
  • Empowering millions to take direct advocacy action for a health care system that puts the interests of people first to achieve historic increases in federal research funding, new treatment approvals and coverage and reimbursement for better access and delivery of care;
  • Expanding access to excellence in screening, care, treatment and survivorship across all 50 states to ensure that anyone at risk or diagnosed with lung cancer benefits from life-saving services closer to home.

To help launch GO2 Foundation’s catalytic programs, a $15 million challenge grant is being provided in memory of Skip Viragh, a respected and successful financial entrepreneur who inspired those around him to seek innovative solutions and high impact results. This grant, the largest single gift ever for lung cancer, will support GO2 Foundation’s vital work to unite a community that empowers people, increases survival, drives innovative research, and changes the future of lung cancer.

“I know that Skip would be pleased to see his donation going to a visionary organization that aligns with his ‘can-do’ spirit and strong sense of purpose that guided his life,” said a close family member. “Like Skip, who always inspired his team to be strategic and think big, GO2 Foundation embraces this same spirit to make the most profound impact ever on lung cancer survival. We hope this challenge grant in Skip’s memory encourages other donors to step up and sustain this critical life-saving work.”

With this historic gift and combined forces, the GO2 Foundation for Lung Cancer will transform survivorship as the world’s leading organization dedicated to saving, improving and extending the lives of millions at risk for or living with the disease.

For more information, please visit www.go2foundation.org.

CONTACT:  Julia Spiess Lewis | julia@perrycom.com | (916) 658-0144

Tuesday, November 14, 2017

ALCF and ALCMI: Who They Are and What They Do

We are about halfway through Lung Cancer Awareness Month and I would like to offer some information about a fantastic organization. If you are reading this, you likely know about this group. But, even if you do, I encourage you to sit back with your favorite beverage and take a few minutes to watch the video at the end of this post.

When supporting any cause or charity with a financial gift, prudent questions are “Where does the money go?”“How effective is the organization?”“Is it worthy of my support?”, "What are they doing?", "What have they done?" I ask these questions myself before choosing to financially support any charitable cause.

This video, narrated by their Senior Director of Patient Services and Programs, Danielle Hicks, does an excellent job of answering these questions for The Bonnie J.  Addario Lung Cancer Foundation (ALCF).

I met the Addarios shortly after my mother died in 2007.  I was immediately struck by their sincerity, warmth - and tenacity.  But, I was also impressed by their team and how they were attacking the lung cancer problem with intelligence and professionalism.  In 2010, The Joan Gaeta Lung Cancer Fund proudly became an affiliate of ALCF.  And, since 2012, those of you in Georgia have been able to order Lung Cancer Awareness License Plates - a first in the United States.  85% of the annual tag fee goes to ALCF’s research institute.

You can also donate directly to ALCF via this link.  Please to watch the video and consider a donation during this important month.

Thank you.


Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Lung Cancer Study of Why Young, Healthy are Stricken

Originally published on June 24th, 2014 by Victoria Colliver at SFGate.com.
Victoria is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer.

Natalie DiMarco's only obvious risk factor for getting lung cancer was having lungs.

Natalie DiMarco
DiMarco had been experiencing respiratory problems for months in 2010, but her doctors just assumed the mother of two had allergies. By the time she learned she had lung cancer, the disease had spread into her lymph nodes and reached the membranes that surround the lungs.

"I'm young, didn't have any history of smoking, and that's why a doctor didn't X-ray me from the beginning," said DiMarco, now 36, who lives in Penngrove with her husband, daughters, ages 5 and 6, and a teenage stepson.

An estimated 4,600 to 6,900 people under 40 in the U.S. are diagnosed every year with lung cancer that has no apparent cause.

The disease appears to be quite different from the lung cancer found in longtime smokers and, aside from initial research that indicates that young patients, like DiMarco, tend to share certain genetic changes, the source remains a mystery.

A new study just getting under way hopes to find out more about these patients, what they have in common and, potentially, why they get lung cancer. If researchers can find a common thread, or several, it could lead to more effective treatment or point the way to new targeted therapies.

The $300,000 Genomics of Young Lung Cancer Study is small - just 60 patients - but the lead researchers hope it will help find the answers they're looking for and even help others with lung cancer, particularly the 15 percent of the nearly 230,000 Americans diagnosed with lung cancer each year who have never smoked.

Addario Lung Cancer Medical Institute, a partner organization of the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation in San Carlos, initiated and is paying for the study along with Genentech.

Not much is known.

Bonnie Addario, who was diagnosed with lung cancer in her mid-50s in 2003 and founded the organizations that bear her name, said much is unknown about this population of patients because it's never been systematically studied.

"We're hoping to find something that may be in another cancer or another disease that could be part of their therapy," she said.

Dr. Barbara Gitlitz, a lead researcher of the study and director of the lung, head and neck program at the University of Southern California's Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, said the disease should be thought about as its own entity.

"We may discover that by looking at the genomics of these people, we may find driver mutations. We'll see patterns that might be specific to this population and we might see something new," she said.

Time is of the essence, considering how devastating a lung cancer diagnosis is.

Bonnie Addario
Just 15 percent of people diagnosed with lung cancer live longer than five years, in part because the disease is difficult to detect in its earlier stages and tends to be caught too late. That's particularly true among young people because no one's looking for it.

"What we're hearing quite often is that they're athletes and they're very fit - the people you would least expect to have cancer, let alone lung cancer," Addario said.

She added that the disease appears to be more common in young, nonsmoking women than in their male counterparts.

Inspired by Cal athlete.

Jill Costello
The study was inspired by Jill Costello, a San Francisco native and varsity coxswain for UC Berkeley's women's crew, who died of lung cancer in 2010 at age 22, a year after she was diagnosed. Jill's Legacy, a subsidiary of Addario's foundation, was created in her honor to raise funds and awareness for lung cancer among young people.

Researchers do know that young people and nonsmokers with non-small-cell lung cancer - the most common kind - typically have alterations in their genes that can affect how the disease is treated.

The genetic mutation found most often - EGRF, for epidermal growth factor receptor - occurs in about 10 to 15 percent of non-small-cell lung cancer patients.

But a host of other known mutations - ALK, ROS1, BRAF, HER2, MET, RET - have also been identified as contributing to lung cancer in young patients, said Dr. Geoffrey Oxnard, a lung cancer specialist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, also a lead researcher of the study.

Drugs have been developed in recent years to "target" those mutations, or go after those specific cells to thwart their growth. The first EGRF therapies, AstraZeneca's Iressa, or gefitinib, was approved by federal regulators in 2003 followed by Roche's Tarceva, or erlotinib, in 2005.

But even these relatively new treatments don't cure the disease; at most they buy time - from several months to five years - before the cancer returns.

Oxnard said he hopes the study - which will test for more than 200 mutations - will not only show a pattern of these genetic alterations but also spotlight the necessity for young and nonsmoking people to get genetically tested after diagnosis, which is not routinely done in all centers.

"We know comprehensive genetic testing has the potential to make a difference in any cancer patient, but we think in these patients, it's really going to be transformative," Oxnard said.

DiMarco, who hopes to participate in the study, said she learned her genetic subtype by seeking out specialists around the country. Almost by chance her biopsy was tested by a Boston surgeon for the ROS1 alteration, which in 2010 was just newly identified.

The mutation makes DiMarco a candidate for a drug called crizotinib, sold under Pfizer's brand name Xalkori. DiMarco, who has undergone numerous rounds of chemotherapy and radiation, has not yet resorted to Xalkori because she and her doctors want to keep that in the arsenal to use only if and when it becomes necessary. So far her disease has been kept in check, and she's been off chemotherapy for 17 months while undergoing regular scanning.

Lisa Goldman
Another young patient, Lisa Goldman, a mother of two who lives in Mountain View, was diagnosed with lung cancer in January at age 40. The disease was found in both lungs and considered stage four.

Like DiMarco, Goldman has tested positive for the ROS1 mutation and has also chosen to hold off on Xalkori after receiving other therapies in combination with traditional chemotherapies.

"I have that in my back pocket to use next," she said, referring to the Pfizer drug.

Goldman, who may not be eligible for the study now that she's 41, said the stigma of lung cancer because of its connection to smoking causes her to hesitate about naming her disease and then assert she's never smoked. But she speaks out about having lung cancer because she says she has to.

"People need to know this happens. I'm not a fan of smoking, but nobody deserves to get cancer," she said. "Smoking is a contributor to breast cancer and heart disease and other disease, but people don't ask you if you caused this yourself."

Goldman's latest scan showed her tumors had shrunk or remained stable, with the exception of one tiny new spot. But she tries to retain a sense of normalcy, particularly for her kids, ages 8 and 11.

"How do you live with something like this hanging over your head?" she said. "You just can't live like every day is your last."

Living in the present.

DiMarco manages by incorporating Chinese medicine - acupuncture, massage, cupping therapy - into her life. As far as her young children know, their mom has some "bad cells in her body" that "made a spot in her lung" and that she has to take medications to get rid of it.

While DiMarco knows she's been dealt a difficult hand, she tries to live in the present but look to the future about the potential treatment options.

"It's all about what card you play that buys you the most time," DiMarco said. "If I understand what to do now ... I can sleep easier and not have to worry. But I need to have a plan. I need to know, what do we do next?"

About lung cancer:
  • Every year, more than 228,000 people are diagnosed with lung cancer in the U.S. and about 160,000 will die of the disease.
  • An estimated 7,000 to 9,000 people under age 40 are living with lung cancer. The average age at diagnosis is 70.
  • Lung cancer takes more lives than any other cancer. It accounts for 27 percent of all cancer deaths - more than breast, prostate and colon cancers combined.
  • Funding for lung cancer lags behind other cancers, especially considering the impact of the disease. The federal government spent $315 million on lung cancer research in 2012 compared with $603 million for breast cancer.
  • Most people diagnosed with lung cancer are former smokers or people who've never smoked - about 15 percent have never smoked and more than 50 percent have smoked in the past but quit.

Saturday, July 13, 2013

The Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation Presents the Lung Cancer Living Room. Tuesday, July 16th, 2013


The Lung Cancer Living Room wants to welcome Donell Hill, a peace, well-being, and personal development coach, as our guest speaker on July 16, 2013. To download and print more information about our July 16, 2013 Lung Cancer Living Room CLICK HERE


Download and Print the 2013 / 2014 Calendar


Its going to be another great night, so we hope to see you in person or online via Ustream: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/the-lung-cancer-living-room-support-group

For more information CLICK HERE or contact Danielle Hicks at danielle@lungcancerfoundation.org / 650.598.2857
NEXT UP: AUGUST 20, 2013
Heather Wakelee, MD - Stanford University School of Medicine

THE GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE


Friday, July 12, 2013

Cosmopolitan reports on the new face of lung cancer.

Lung cancer survivor and Jill's Legacy advisory board member, Taylor Bell, was featured in the
August 2013 issue of CosmopolitanCongratulations, Taylor!


Picture

Picture
Copyright 2013 Hearst Communications, Inc. 

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Join the Lung Cancer Living Room Tonight to Learn How Treatment is Getting Personal

Originally published on May 21st at About.com by Lynne Eldridge, MD.
Copyright 2013 About.com.
A diagnosis of cancer is like being immersed in a foreign language camp you don't remember enrolling in. And that was in the past. As advances are made in lung cancer treatment, a whole new array of concepts and terms comes to light. You may have heard of terms such as EGFR and ALK, perhaps even KRAS...
Thankfully this "new" language is worth learning about, and we're fortunate to have people like Bonnie Addario who have set out to make the education process easier. The most significant advances in lung cancer treatment - treatments that have actually budged the survival rate for some people in the last decade - have a lot to do with targeting genetic mutations in cancer cells. What's really exciting is that not only have these treatments improved survival for some people, but they're designed specifically for your type of tumor. It's interesting that cold hard science is reminding us of what we often forget in medicine - that everyone is unique and special.
On Tuesday, May 21, 2013 you are invited to join the Lung Cancer Living Room to learn more. Sponsored by the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation, the Living Room is a monthly support group (meeting on the 3rd Tuesday of the month) that covers topics that people with lung cancer are interested in learning about - in addition to being a place where you are not alone as you live with lung cancer. You can take part from your own living room on your laptop, or attend the group in person at the headquarters in San Carlos, California.
The date: Tuesday, May 21, 2013
The time: 5:30 PM Pacific Standard Time
Guest speaker: Paul Billings, MD, PhD. Dr. Billings is a physician, lecturer, professor, and consultant on genetic information. He will be discussing the road map towards precision medicine, and the role of Next Generation Sequencing and what it means to someone diagnosed with lung cancer.
How to join the conversation: Click on Lung Cancer Living Room Live Streaming and follow the prompts.
A concept that might be helpful to understand before tuning in is that there are many types of lung cancer. If I were to talk with 70 people with lung cancer, they would have 70 different types of lung cancer. Everyone has different mutations present in their cancer cells. And targeting these abnormalities not only hits the mark better, but does so without many of the dreaded side effects of chemotherapy.
It can also help a little to understand exactly what a cancer cell is - and why they are so hard to get rid of. A difficult-to-understand concept is that cancer is caused by not just one mutation, but a series of mutations. There are often mutations that result in cells continuing to grow and divide when they shouldn't. There are often mutations in proteins that tell cells to stop growing. There are also often mutations in genes that code for proteins that tell cells to die (a process called apoptosis.) At the risk of being overly simplistic, the excitement over genetic sequencing is that these mutations can be discovered and overcome with new therapies. Example of medications that work in this way include Tarceva (erlotinib) and Xalkori (crizitonib.)
If you're interested in learning more about the mutations and abnormalities in cancer cells - and hence, the approach that new medications are taking to treat it, check out:
I hope you'll get the chance to take part in this wonderful opportunity. I'm very excited myself to hear the latest in treatments that can be tailored for those I care so deeply for with lung cancer.
To join and "like" the Living Room community, go to the Lung Cancer Living Room Facebook Page.

Monday, April 15, 2013

The Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation presents... The Living Room

April program is patient-focused, titled “Sharing My Personal Journey”

SAN CARLOS, Calif., April 15, 2013 /PRNewswire/ — The Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation invites you to join The Living Room, a lively and interactive online support group for those who are directly and indirectly affected by lung cancer. The April Living Room will feature a patient-focused program, titled “Sharing My Personal Journey.” There’s no guest speaker this month, just stories and experiences from patients and family who can offer hope to others.

“When patients have questions about lung cancer, when they have something they want to talk about, when they need advice from someone who has been there before or from experts who can help, patients don’t have to go far,” said Bonnie J. Addario, founder of the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation. “They just have to go to The Living Room.”

WHERE:  Visit http://www.ustream.tv/channel/the-lung-cancer-living-room-support-group
 
WHEN:  Tuesday, April 16, 2013  |  5:45 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. (PST)

The Living Room is the nation’s premier online lung cancer support group for lung cancer patients and their families, offering expert opinion and advice not found anywhere else. Participants listen and interact with leading experts and leaders in the field of lung cancer treatment and research. The Living Room takes place the third Tuesday of every month and is live-streamed online.

Hardcopies of the Patient Education Handbook, “Navigating Lung Cancer, 360 degrees of HOPE” will be given to all patients participating in person and patients online can request the handbook at: handbook@lungcancerfoundation.org.

Foundation staff monitors the chat room on the live-stream page and forwards questions and comments to support group participants throughout the entire two-hour program. Archived video of the program will be available on the Foundation’s Vimeo page by the second week of May. The program will also air once weekly on Peninsula TV Channel 26.

And join us next month, on May 21, for a special evening with Paul R. Billings MD, PhD, who will talk about the latest developments with molecular profiling and next generation sequencing.


About the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation
The Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation is one of the largest philanthropies (patient-founded, patient-focused, and patient-driven) devoted exclusively to eradicating Lung Cancer through research, early detection, education, and treatment. The Foundation works with a diverse group of physicians, organizations, industry partners, individuals, survivors, and their families to identify solutions and make timely and meaningful change. BJALCF was established on March 1, 2006 as a 501c(3) non-profit organization and has raised more than $10 million for lung cancer research.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

The State of Georgia Releases the First Lung Cancer Awareness Specialty License Plates in the Country

Proceeds to benefit the Joan Gaeta Lung Cancer Fund and their efforts to support research and awareness.
Atlanta, GA (PRWEB) September 27, 2012

On Monday, September 24th, the state of Georgia released the first specialty license plate in the country specifically dedicated to lung cancer awareness. Now drivers can alert fellow motorists that, in Georgia, lung cancer matters!

The plates are now available exclusively through The Joan Gaeta Lung Cancer Fund. Georgia drivers can learn more and begin the process of getting theirs at http://www.LungCancerLicensePlate.org.

The license plate is sponsored by The Joan Gaeta Lung Cancer Fund, a non-profit based in Atlanta that raises awareness and research funds for the number one cancer killer in the world.

The process to create specialty license plates in Georgia typically takes nearly two years. The state requires either 1,000 plates to be presold or an up-front payment to be made to cover the fees for those plates. Through The Joan Gaeta Lung Cancer Fund's fundraising efforts and the incredible generosity of their supporters, the Gaeta Fund was able to make the payment needed and to the get the bill before the legislature in a matter of months.

State Senator Sean Jerguson (R-Holly Springs) was instrumental in adding the lung cancer awareness language to an existing bill (HB 732). He was alerted to this important cause by his close friend and Gaeta Fund supporter, Jackie Archer. A lung cancer survivor herself, Mrs. Archer is also a former Holly Springs City Councilwoman. In April of this year, Georgia Governor Nathan Deal signed HB 732 into law.

Tina Pink holds her Lung Cancer
Awareness Plate - the first one of its kind
in the world to be registered.
"My mother, Joan Gaeta, died of lung cancer after a three-and-a-half year battle," says Tina Pink, a VP of Fundraising for the Gaeta Fund. "She was most passionate about raising awareness and fighting the stigma of the disease. This plate is a big step in that direction. I know she would be very proud! Now it's our mission to get them on as many cars as possible!"

Mrs. Pink's sister, Theresa Andretta, VP of Operations, concurs. "Lung cancer kills more people than the next five cancers combined! Yet, it receives the least amount of funding. We have no choice but to raise awareness and to fight the stigma. These plates are a great way to do that. It is incredible to finally see them on the road!"

The $25 plate manufacturing fee, payable to The Joan Gaeta Lung Cancer Fund, helps them support ground-breaking research through the Addario Lung Cancer Medical Institute.

ABOUT THE JOAN GAETA LUNG CANCER FUND

The Joan Gaeta Lung Cancer Fund was created in the fall of 2007 as The Joan Gaeta Lung Cancer Foundation by her husband and children to raise awareness of the disease, to educate the public, and to be an advocate for research. They also strive to eliminate the stigma of lung cancer and to support survivors and their loved ones in their local community.

In July of 2010, they re-launched as The Joan Gaeta Lung Cancer Fund benefiting the Addario Lung Cancer Medical Institute. Their ultimate goal remains the same: “to eradicate lung cancer.” By partnering with one significant research initiative, they can make a much greater impact in wiping out lung cancer.

http://www.forjoan.org

ABOUT THE ADDARIO LUNG CANCER MEDICAL INSTITUTE (ALCMI)

ALCMI was established in 2008 as a 501(c) (3) non-profit organization with the ultimate goal of significantly impacting survival by directly catalyzing and accelerating discovery of new and more effective treatment options for all lung cancer patients. Presently, ALCMI has 13 academic and community medical centers in the United States and Europe closely collaborating on cutting edge research initiatives.

http://www.alcmi.net

ABOUT LUNG CANCER

  • Even if you have never smoked, you can get lung cancer. 
  • 60% of new cases are now diagnosed in non-smokers and former smokers. 
  • Lung cancer is the #1 cancer killer of both men and women. 
  • Every three minutes, someone is diagnosed with the disease. 
  • It kills more people each year than breast cancer, prostate cancer, colon cancer, liver cancer, melanoma, and kidney cancer combined. 
  • It surpassed breast cancer of the #1 killer of women in 1987. 
  • The five year survival rate for lung cancer is still only 15% - the same as it was nearly 40 years ago. 
  • Learn more at http://www.NobodyDeservesIt.com

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Attention #Georgia Drivers!

The nation's first Lung Cancer Awareness specialty license plates are now available!
Learn how to get yours at LungCancerLicensePlate.org!


You can read the original press release here.


Thursday, August 2, 2012

The Chick Running From New York to San Francisco @greatlungrun @jillslegacy @bonniejaddario #lungcancer

The following article was written by Kelcey Harrison and published on The Huffington Post on July 31st, 2012.  Kelcey is a native San Franciscan and is a major marathoner and lung cancer advocate. On July 30th 2012, after leaving her job at New York County’s District Attorney’s office, the 24 year old Harvard grad set out on her Great Lung Run – a 3,500-mile run from New York’s Times Square to downtown San Francisco. Harrison expects to arrive in November 2012 and will be blogging  and tweeting her adventures until then.

Kelcey Harrison:

I don't know if I am in denial, am extremely naive, or if I truly am confident that this is exactly what I am supposed to be doing right now, but for some reason the fact that I've started running 30 miles a day and won't stop until I reach San Francisco doesn't seem to stress or scare me. Maybe it's just that crazy people don't realize they're that crazy?

I'm just your average 24-year-old who grew up in San Francisco, went to Harvard University, and moved to New York soon after college. For the last two years I worked at the New York County District Attorney's Office. Although I had the best time working there, I realized that law school was not really the route I wanted to take, and I was feeling a pull to make a change coupled with a very strong desire to contribute more to Jill's Legacy, I began thinking about some new options.

This is where I break from the normal... The idea that I came up with was to run from New York to San Francisco to raise money and awareness for lung cancer. Lots of people asked, why? Couldn't I have done something a little less risky? But for me, it made perfect sense. I am using a skill that I have been blessed with -- running long-distance -- to make a difference and to draw people's attention to a topic that deserves greater discussion, awareness, and funding. I am doing something really big and out there, which was what Jill was all about.

Jill and I first met when we attended kindergarten together. We went to school together from kindergarten through high school and remained good friends through college. While we were in school, there was a group of about five of us that was inseparable. She was a friend who was always there for me and had been in my life for so long that I always expected her to be around for life's big moments.

When she was diagnosed with lung cancer at just 21 years old, it was a huge shock. I certainly did not know how to handle it, but she did. She lived with more grace, determination, strength, and joy than most people will ever demonstrate in their lifetimes. After her diagnosis she did a lot of advocacy work with the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation. In the last year of her life, Jill was named Pac-10 Women's Athlete of the Year, she graduated Cal Berkeley with a 4.0 and she led the Cal Women's crew team to a national championship. A few weeks after, Jill passed away. After her passing a group of young people with connections to Jill and/or the foundation formed Jill's Legacy, an advisory board to the foundation. Our goal is to mobilize young people to use their voices and power to raise awareness for lung cancer and to really start a movement to demand a change.

Our goal is to debunk the stigma that faces lung cancer patients. The common belief that lung cancer is a smoker's disease or one that only affects older people is wrong. The first question people always ask in response to a diagnosis is, "Oh, you were a smoker?" The underlying message that comes across with this question is the idea that lung cancer patients somehow brought the disease upon themselves and so it is the last disease to get funding for research. This has to change. Nobody deserves to get cancer for any reason and, of equal importance no one deserves to get a disease for which there simply is not enough support. The survival rate for lung cancer has not changed in 40 years and that fact simply boggles my mind. With the technology we have today, there should be better options for early detection and treatment so that fewer lives will be lost. Why aren't people talking about this! For those of us who knew Jill, it drives us nuts.

So, my journey has begun and I already have so much to share! Follow my Twitter account, as I will be Tweeting the wild adventures and characters I encounter along the way.

I can't articulate how thankful I am for all of the support I have already received. I am already overwhelmed by the responses. We have raised over $100,000 since announcing the Great Lung Run just one month ago. I would be so appreciative of any support that readers can offer, whether that be in the form of a wave, a tweet or a penny. To support, visit www.thegreatlungrun.com, follow me on Twitter, or email me at Kelceyharrison@thegreatlungrun.com.

Monday, July 2, 2012

William Marble Kipp II and @bonniejaddario Fundraiser #lungcancer

Originally posted at www.lungcancerfoundtion.org.
BLINDSIDED BY DIAGNOSIS, 42-YEAR-OLD SAN FRANCISCO ENTREPRENEUR RAISES NEARLY $70,000 TO TAKE DOWN LUNG CANCER
William Marble Kipp II and Friends Join the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation’s Army of Alliance Partners
SAN FRANCISCO (July 2, 2012) — Like many who rushed to Silicon Valley’s Internet gold rush, William Marble Kipp II found fame fast and furious. First as an innovator in the early 1990’s at Google, then launching his own renewable energy enterprise, nothing could stop this passionate 42-year-old trailblazer.
Until last summer in August of 2011 when the never smoker, avid athlete and father of two was diagnosed with metastatic Lung Cancer.
In the months that have followed, with the help of his sister Kassidee, 29, and other family members, Kipp is working non-stop to spread awareness and raise funding for the cancer that kills more than 1.3 million worldwide annually and 450 per day in the United States.
On May 19, 2012, The William Marble Kipp II Foundation www.WMK2.com raised nearly $70,000 for the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation (BJALCF) to help efforts to find a cure for Lung Cancer, at its inaugural fundraiser. The event was held at Bluxome Street Winery in the bustling SoMa district of San Francisco. More than 180 friends and family joined the Kipps to show support for Kipp and to mobilize with the Foundation to end Lung Cancer
This pairing of the Kipp Foundation and the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation speaks volumes about the grassroots efforts and initiatives that are joining forces to lend their voice to help fight Lung Cancer. To date, and coast-to-coast, private foundations, independent fundraising initiatives, individuals, families and organizations have teamed up to build on the momentum of BJALCF. They include the Atlanta-based Joan Gaeta Lung Cancer Fund which “Dances for Joan” each year, Grow For The Cure out of South Carolina which touts an innovative online adventure for men to grow beards in humorous shapes and names like “Zappa” and “Old Dutch” challenging support from friends online.  Mae’s Breath in New York inhales hope and exhales the stigma, Minnesota-hosted dinner parties in honor of a loved one, galas in Los Angeles, and the Hank Baskett Classic Golf Tournament at Trump International gather thousands together to raise money for Lung Cancer research.
“I have always believed taking down Lung Cancer is going to take a village,” says Bonnie J. Addario, founder and 8-year Lung Cancer survivor. “I couldn’t be more thrilled that from SoHo to SoMa we’ve got an uprising and urgency in motion to collaborate in a celebratory way with courageous celebrity voices speaking up like Hank Baskett and Kendra Wilkinson. We’re fighting for the lives of people like William and Hank’s dad because what the world needs to know is that ANYONE CAN GET LUNG CANCER.”
“This is just the beginning of what we want to do for Bonnie and the foundation,” said Kassidee Kipp, organizer of the event. “When my brother was diagnosed he was blindsided. But we quickly decided that we wanted to do something to help others impacted by the disease and to help them know they are definitely not alone.”
At the fundraiser, William’s children, Katerina, 8, and William the III, who they call, “Mars,” 6, sold bracelets they made themselves raising almost $1,200 in support of their dad and his battle with Lung Cancer, said Kassidee.
“His kids feel they need to do something to help their dad,” she said. “They are going to fight to find a cure for their dad and others.”
What’s next? It’s called “Fun-Raising”
The list of ways you can get involved is growing in leaps and bounds. Please jump on one of the bandwagons below or come up with your own. The Foundation is here to partner with you in many ways…your imagination has no limits. Lung Cancer does not stand a chance because all monies raised go directly to cutting-edge Lung Cancer research.
TUNE IN TOMORROW NIGHT to “Kendra ON TOP” (WE tv)  Tuesday, July 3
www.wetv.com/shows/kendra-on-top
TUNE INTO THE LUNG CANCER LIVING ROOM® EVERY THIRD TUESDAY
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/the-lung-cancer-living-room-support-group
BJALCF–Your Next Step is the Cure® 5ks across the country
www.yournextstepisthecure.org
Jill’s Legacy®–Jog for Jills 5ks on College Campuses
www.jogforjill.com
Jill’s Legacy®-Nick’s Crispy Tacos fundraising Party-San Francisco, CA July 26
1500 Broadway, San Francisco, CA 94109
THE GREAT LUNG RUN NYC to SF July 29
www.thegreatlungrun.com
Stride for Susie and Smita 5K Saratoga, CA August 26
www.strideforsusieandsmita.kintera.org
Taking Lung Cancer By Storm, Seattle Storm  Seattle, WA September 21
www.lungcancerfoundation.org
Cruise For Your Breath Baltimore, MD September 22
www.cruiseforyourbreath.com
Fighting Barry 5K, Washington, DC September 23
www.fightingbarry.com
Fry’s.com Open CordeValle Golf Course, CordeValle, CA October 8 -14
www.frysopen.com
A Next Step For The Cure In Honor of Fred Spanton Ashville, NC October 21
www.lungcancerfoundation.org
Palisano/Benson Lung Cancer Barrel Race Santa Rosa, CA November 4
www.2012memorialbarrelrace.kintera.org
Simply the Best Dinner Gala 7 San Francisco, CA November 10
www.lungcancerfoundation.org
For press inquiries, contact Sheila Von Driska, Communications, at 415.357.1278 or sheila@lungcancerfoundation.org
To host an event in your town, contact Jennifer Hughes, Manager of Affiliates and Independent Fundraisers, at 650.333.6936 or jhughes@lungcancerfoundation.org
About the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation
BJALCF is one of the largest philanthropies (patient-founded, patient-focused, and patient-driven) devoted exclusively to eradicating Lung Cancer through research, early detection, education, and treatment. The Foundation works with a diverse group of physicians, organizations, industry partners, individuals, survivors, and their families to identify solutions and make timely and meaningful change. BJALCF was established on March 6, 2006 as a 501©(3) non-profit organization and has raised over nine million dollars for Lung Cancer research. www.lungcancerfoundation.org
About the William Marble Kipp II Foundation
The WMKII Foundation is dedicated to increasing awareness of Lung Cancer and funding research for advanced treatments for the disease. William was diagnosed with stage IV Lung Cancer in August of 2011 and is currently undergoing treatment.  In 2012 his family and friends established the WMKII Foundation in his honor. www.wmk2.org.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Upcoming #LungCancer #Awareness Events #in Your Area @bonniejaddario @jillslegacy

Lung cancer matters, too.  Nobody deserves it. And, you do not have to smoke to get it.

It kills more people than breast, prostate, colon, liver, kidney, and melanoma cancers combined. Yet, lung cancer receives a mere fraction of the attention and research funding.

As a proud affiliate of The Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation, The Joan Gaeta Lung Cancer Fund is fighting to change this.

You can learn much more on our web site at www.forJoan.org.

The Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation has many upcoming events where you can get involved and help us to raise awareness, to fight the stigma, and to eradicate lung cancer!

Check out the event calendar HERE.


Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Hank Baskett and Chris Draft Teamed Up with the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation and Raised $145,000 to Drive the #1 Cancer Killer Off The Map


SAN FRANCISCO, June 20, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- The former NFL duo is rallying a star-studded list of Hollywood and athletic celebrities to join them in their personal journey to tackle lung cancer

Hank: "I'm here to support Bonnie's Foundation because lung cancer is personal to me. It has swooped in and attacked my dad, & I understand how brutally destructive this cancer is & how many people are waging war to battle it."

Chris: "I am honored to be here and passionate about helping an organization like the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation that is leading the way, and pushing for immediate answers - not future hypotheses, for people like my wife, who never smoked and was in great physical shape, but was diagnosed with lung cancer and died less than a year later. Bonnie is demanding answers NOW!"

Hank: "Every breath you take--the fuel of your body starts with your lungs. So take care of your lungs because you'll need them--more than you'll ever imagine. Trust me."

Bonnie: "I get the breathing thing...I know it first hand and I know what it feels like when you can't. It is our FUEL. Without it, life is terribly compromised...just having the support of Chris and Hank takes my breath away--in the good way!"

While the U.S. Open was in full swing just 15 minutes away at the Olympic Club in San Francisco, 144 heroes including NFL stars Chris Draft and Hank Baskett were championing the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation's Seventh Annual "Lung Cancer: Drive it off the Earth" Golf Tournament at Alistair MacKenzie-designed Green Hills Country Club. This year's tournament raised more than $145,000 for this least-funded, yet most deadly cancer, which will go toward Lung Cancer research.

For both players, lung cancer is personal. Baskett, signed by the Colts and went on to play five years in the NFL with the Indianapolis Colts, Minnesota Vikings, and the Philadelphia Eagles is helping his father battle the disease. Draft, played 12 years in the NFL for the Chicago Bears, San Francisco 49ers, Atlanta Falcons, Carolina Panthers, St. Louis Rams, and the Buffalo Bills recently lost his wife to the disease. Together, they are tackling lung cancer by raising awareness.

"We're proud that Hank Baskett and Chris Draft are making a bold statement against Lung Cancer," says Bonnie J. Addario, founder and a Lung Cancer survivor. "We're so honored to have Hank and Chris--and their football and Hollywood friends--on our team helping to raise much-needed funding and awareness for Lung Cancer and the message that ANYONE CAN GET LUNG CANCER."

The reception cocktail party, silent and live auctions and raffle proved that everyone was a winner. Addario, one of the rare Lung Cancer survivors and founder of the Foundation, welcomed Draft and Baskett into the Foundation's family at dinner.

"I'm so proud to have Hank and Chris in our family," said Bonnie. "Hank, I loved meeting your Dad at the tournament you held for us in May at the Trump National Golf Club. The only way I can describe him is he's a GREAT BIG HUG and your mom is a pistol. The leadership and courage you and Chris are bringing to the team has grown way beyond the football field. Thank you for stepping up and helping us turn Lung Cancer into a manageable, survivable disease."

There wasn't a dry eye in the house after an airing of "Chris Draft, Love and Loss," -ESPN's touching profile of Chris and his late wife Keasha, and their commitment to dance, smile, and live as they fought lung cancer together. As a former Charlotte Hornets Honeybee dancer and member of Clemson University's Rally Cat dance squad, Keasha was an energetic vibrant young woman who had never smoked when she was diagnosed with Stage IV Lung Cancer in December 2010. At the time, her only "symptom" was a slight shortness of breath a few days earlier. Despite the diagnosis and knowing the long odds they faced, Keasha and Chris decided to fight back. On November 27, 2011, standing side-by-side, they launched Team Draft together at their wedding. One month later, Keasha lost her courageous fight and died at the age of 38.

"The only way to tackle the issue of lung cancer is to do it as a solid team bringing together everyone from the patients and caregivers to the researchers and the doctors who are demanding that the results so far are not good at all," said Draft. "There's no one group that has a monopoly on this and that is why I was drawn to Bonnie and the foundation because they are working as a team with the Addario Lung Cancer Medical Institute (ALCMI)  and their Lung Cancer Living Room® series.  What separates them is that Bonnie knows there is a sense of urgency. Keasha had one year from her diagnosis, so I don't listen when someone says 'we're working on it." That's not good enough."

First place winners of the sold-out tournament were Michael Vasquez, Greg Gabbani, Josh Lutz and many-time winner Eddie Hernandez with an astounding 54. Second place winners were Rich Deponte, Stan Colombo, Dan Poncabra and long-time faithful major donor Mo Townsley with a score of 55.

The tournament's presenting sponsor's team from the Burns Family Foundation and Mobius Fit was led by Rob Dean and the foursome including Dave Engel, Ross Headley and Jeff Lokey came in third with a score of 56 (26 back 9).

To view select photos from the tournament, go to:
http://tinyurl.com/BJAgolf2012 

To join the team and host an event or golf tournament in your town, contact Jennifer Hughes, Manager of Affiliates and Independent Fundraisers, at 650.333.6936 or jhughes@lungcancerfoundation.org

For press inquiries, contact Sheila Von Driska, Communications, at 415.357.1278 or sheila@lungcancerfoundation.org

About the Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation
BJALCF is one of the largest philanthropies (patient-founded, patient-focused, and patient-driven) devoted exclusively to eradicating Lung Cancer through research, early detection, education, and treatment. The Foundation works with a diverse group of physicians, organizations, industry partners, individuals, survivors, and their families to identify solutions and make timely and meaningful change. BJALCF was established on March 6, 2006 as a 501 (c) 3 non-profit organization. www.lungcancerfoundation.org

About The Chris Draft Family Foundation and Team Draft
The Chris Draft Family Foundation is a 501(c) 3 non-profit corporation dedicated to strengthening communities by empowering families to live healthy lifestyles. The Foundation focuses on several initiatives with overarching themes that stress the importance of education, healthy lifestyles, character development, personal responsibility, self-discipline, and physical fitness. To learn more about the Chris Draft Family Foundation, please visit www.chrisdraftfamilyfoundation.org .

SOURCE Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation

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