Advances in childhood cancer are a success story in modern medicine. But in the past decade, those strides have stalled for Black and Hispanic youth, opening a gap in death rates, according to a new ...
Readers, including Christie Brinkley, discuss a column by Pamela Paul about the lifelong health issues these children face. To the Editor: Re “It Takes a Lifetime to Survive Childhood Cancer,” by ...
Every year, an estimated 400,000 children worldwide develop a form of cancer. Five-year survival rates in high-income nations are typically over 80%, with an expected cure rate of near 100% for some ...
The war with Russia compounds the struggles of pediatric cancer patients and their families, but it has also prompted positive changes in treatment in Ukraine. By Megan Specia Megan Specia traveled to ...
Every year, almost 16,000 American children are diagnosed with cancer before their 21st birthday. After receiving a devastating diagnosis and starting intensive treatment, patients and their immediate ...
Thought LeadersDr. Church Molecular and Pediatric PathologistBoston Children's Hospital In this interview, Dr. Church, the Molecular and Pediatric Pathologist at Boston Children's Hospital, talks to ...
The YMCA of Greater Waukesha County has launched a new program to support families navigating childhood cancer, like the ...
Joe McDonough sat down for an interview with CURE to share his family’s story and the inspiration behind the B+ Foundation.
Retinoblastoma is the most common children’s eye cancer. There are two types, heritable and nonheritable. The heritable type affects both eyes and produces multiple tumors, while the nonheritable type ...
For Ryley Bergeron Folz’s family, moms Jessica Folz and Danika Bergeron, Northern Ontario Families of Children with Cancer ...