The Fight to Beat Childhood Cancer

The Fight to Beat Childhood Cancer

An incredible amount of people still believe that cancer is an “old person’s” disease, or at least an “adult” disease and are shocked when they find out that this is not so.

This is especially true in Africa, especially in the rural areas where information that we take for granted since the advent of the worldwide web and Google is not available, and old beliefs and cultures rule.

This belief is also true partly because, 99% of the time, cancer IS a malady tied to age. The cells in our bodies sometimes lose their battle against the toxins we’re exposed to, the sedentary lifestyles we lead, the viruses we contract as we go about our adult lives, and our genetic predispositions, and proliferate uncontrollably.

The approximately 1% of remaining cancers occur in children. It’s a particularly cruel reality when infants, toddlers, and teenagers draw the proverbial short straw despite their comparatively unpolluted anatomies.

We are, however, more hopeful when it comes to children’s cancer, because young bodies tolerate aggressive chemotherapy far better than older ones, and survival rates among children are higher in most of the world.

Some of the reasons for this hope are:

Children Get Different Types Of Cancer Than Adults

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Source: The Fight to Beat Childhood Cancer

#BraveKid, Emma’s Story: Losing to leukemia is not an option

#BraveKid, Emma’s Story: Losing to leukemia is not an option

Emma was diagnosed with Philadelphia-chromosome positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) when she was 11 years old. But for Emma, losing was not an option. After three years of remission, Emma’s cancer returned and she came to C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital for a bone marrow transplant.

C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital is home to one of the nation’s best children’s cancer programs, according to U.S. News & World Report. U-M’s pediatric bone marrow transplant program is the largest and most experienced in Michigan. From early and accurate diagnosis capabilities, to effective treatment and improving life-long quality of life for cancer survivors, C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital is committed to being the Leaders and Best for children with cancer.

Learn more at http://www.mottchildren.org/cancer.