Awareness Events
Make a Difference this September
0September is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month and Leukemia, Lymphoma and Myeloma Awareness Month. Both awareness initiatives are near and dear to the heart of Friends of Heroes.
An estimated 10,730 children under the age of 15 were diagnosed with cancer in the United States in 2008, with leukemia being the most commonly diagnosed childhood cancer at 32.6 percent of all cases. Lymphoma ranked as the third most diagnosed pediatric cancer in 2008.
Our group began with a passion to put an end to childhood cancer and we annually participate in the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society’s Light The Night Walk to raise money and awareness for a cure. There are simple ways we can each make a difference by supporting research, raising awareness and contacting legislators.
Did you know:
- Every five minutes, someone in this country is diagnosed with blood cancer?
- Every nine minutes, someone loses the fight?
- Leukemia is the leading cause of disease-related death among children under age 15?
- Approximately 3,000 children die from a blood cancer every year?
Help us make a difference for these families!!!
Donate by visiting one of our team member pages at:
http://pages.lightthenight.org/2009/friendsofheroes
The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS) funds lifesaving research that has contributed to major advances in the treatment of blood cancers and treatments for other types of cancer, such as chemotherapy and stem cell transplants. These treatments have helped patients live better, longer lives. New targeted therapies that kill cancer cells without harming normal tissue are providing drugs and procedures that are improving quality of life.
- A donation of $25 provides patients and their loved ones with FREE booklets that contain up-to-date information on their disease and help them make informed decisions about their treatment options.
- A donation of $50 makes possible a Family Support group with a trained facilitator where comfort can be found and experiences can be shared among patients and family members.
- A donation of $100 helps supply laboratory researchers with supplies and materials critical to carrying out their search for cures.
- A donation of $1,000 makes possible one- on-one conversations with health care specialists who provide patients with information about their disease, treatment options, and helps prepare them with questions for their health care team.
Make a difference that will make a big impact!
Participate in a Light The Night Walk near you:
http://pages.lightthenight.org/2009/friendsofheroes
Join our Light The Night Team – Friends of Heroes and raise awareness among your family, friends and co-workers. Light The Night Walk is the nation’s night to pay tribute and bring hope to thousands of people battling blood cancers and to commemorate loved ones lost.
Funds raised by walkers provide:
- Lifesaving blood cancer research
- Financial assistance to cover patient expenses for transportation, medication and testing
- Free educational materials and events for patients and their families
- Local programs such as Family Support Groups and First Connection, a peer-to-peer counseling program
- Comprehensive, personalized assistance through our Information Resource Center
Light The Night Walk events are evenings filled with inspiration. Carrying illuminated balloons – white for survivors, red for supporters and gold in memory of loved ones lost to cancer – thousands of walkers – men, women and children – form a community of caring, bringing light to the dark world of cancer.
If you already have a Light The Night Team, join us as an affiliate team. Contact Carole at affiliates@friendsofheroes.org for more information.
Make a difference on Capital Hill
Urge Your Representative to Co-Sponsor Pediatric Cancer Survivorship Legislation
Improvements in long-term survival rates for pediatric cancer patients present some new challenges for patients, family members, providers and policy makers. Patients may face greater risk of secondary cancers; they may have limited access to follow-up care; the follow-up care they do receive may be inadequate; and some may face cognitive or psychosocial problems. Expensive long-term treatments, hurdles to purchasing health, life, or disability insurance, and employment barriers also pose difficulties for cancer survivors.
Reps. Jackie Speier (D-CA) and Mary Bono Mack (R-CA) recently introduced the Pediatric, Adolescent, and Young Adult Cancer Survivorship Research and Quality of Life Act (H.R. 2109). This legislation would provide much needed resources to fund research and survivorship programs that would dramatically improve the quality of life for all cancer survivors.
Please take a moment to send a letter to your representative urging them to co-sponsor this important legislation. Please make sure that pediatric cancer survivors receive the care they need as they move on with their lives.
Source: LLS.org
Friends of Heroes Affiliate Team – Angel’s Wings
1Team Angel’s Wings is a new Friends of Heroes affiliate, but they are not new to Light The Night or blood cancers. National Co-captain Jenn Burgess interviewed Helen Bailey, captain of Angel’s Wings to find out more about why they participate in Light The Night.

Angel Marie
Can you tell us a little bit about how your team Angel’s Wings started?
My son, James Rodriguez, had a friend/classmate whose younger sister, Angel, developed leukemia. Angel’s mother asked for donations, help and support for Light The Night, so I decided to get a team together of James’s classmates to help.
Two years later, my mother Estela Bailey was diagnosed with non Hodgkins lymphoma. And, a grandparent of one of our walkers was also diagnosed with cancer, so I decided to keep the team going in their honor.
How are Angel and your mom doing today post-treatment?
Angel is doing great! She was the honored hero for last year’s Light The Night walk and is now in first grade. Angel only needs to visit the clinic for treatment every six months (instead of every day!) which allows her to live a “normal” life. Due to additional complications, doctors did not share hope that she would make it this far. We’re thrilled that she proved the doctors wrong!
My mom is back to being a mom! I am grateful she is doing well and here to watch my kids and grandkids grow up.
It’s so good to hear they are doing well!! Events like Light The Night fund blood cancer research and helps families through patient services programs. Survival rates have increased dramatically in the past 30 years, yet a cure is still needed.
Let’s talk about Light The Night! What made you decide to become a part of FOH as an affiliate?
A new co-worker (Jenn) invited me to a local baseball game which was a fundraising and awareness event for Light The Night. She told me about her team, Friends of Heroes, so I looked up their website and between what I read about the pediatric cancer research grants and the excitement she showed about their success stories and fundraising, I decided to join her team as an affiliate.
Please share a little bit about your planning leading up to the walk. What are your plans for team fundraising this year? Is there anything that worked well in the past?
I am trying to recruit as many members as possible at work and school, plus friends and family. I want to get everyone together for a meeting to decided other ways to raise money like making pins, buttons, ribbons, etc. to sell. Maybe hold a car wash, bake sale, etc.
I also have the help of my daughter, Nicole Bustinza, as a co-captain. She is able to run errands, deliver walker information and pick up donations when I’m at work. Together, we are able to reach more people.
You’re good at recruiting and motivating people. What do you say to encourage people to walk and raise money for Light The Night?
I tell them that participating in this walk may one day help save the lives of their children, family or friends like it did for Angel and my mom. What cause could be better?
When someone asks you what Light The Night means to you, what do you tell them?
It gives me the opportunity to help save lives!
Helen, thanks so much for sharing more about your team and what you are doing this year. Is there anything else you would like to add?
I think since so many children have been afflicted by this disease, we should target schools to help.
Well said! The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society has a priority to help young patients and has initiated the Trish Greene Back to School Program for the Child with Cancer. The program is designed to help parents, teachers and administrators when a child in their school has cancer. Programs like these can help schools and care givers provide the best possible chance for pediatric patients to renter their schools and succeed.
To donate to or join Helen and her team, visit Team Angel’s Wings.
Check out the photos from the baseball game fundraiser and awareness event. Walkers who purchased tickets walked onto the field with the twinkling lights. For each ticket purchased, $5 was donated directly back to The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. To plan a similar event in your city, contact the Community Relations Manager for your local ball club. (Mouseover the sides of the large photo to navigate.)
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Blogging for Blood Cancer Sponsors
0Our thanks to the many sponsors who supported our Blogging for Blood Cancer awareness event! Thank you for helping us to make a difference!
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Blogging for Blood Cancer a week of great posts and new friends
80Welcome to the the eight and final day of Blogging For Blood Cancer. Today’s Prize is It’s a Glam Thing beauty gift basket (value=$175) courtesy of It’s a Glam Thing.
To qualify to win, leave a comment with an answer to the question after reading the post.
The week of Blogging for Blood Cancer has come to end, but that does not mean that we at FOH will stop blogging for blood cancer and we hope you will continue to come back and check for updates. Thank you to all who have participated and thank you to our very own Lois of Goodies for mom for all the hard work she put into this and all the great prizes. We would also like to thank The Blue Top Hat, The greeting cookie, Susan Murphay inc., Stakersensations,Pretty Posh Princess,Circle of Sentiments,Lucky Girl Trading Company,Mimsi Bags,Its a Glam thing, and Sampsonite for the donation of all the great prizes.
This has been a great week. We have had many great post. If you didn’t get a chance to read them you should check them out.
Monday:Welcome to the Blogging for Blood Cancer Event
Tuesday:Light The Night for Blood Cancers
Wednesday:Every Dollar Counts Toward a Cure!
Thursday:FOH and Their Affliates – Partners in Eradicating Pediatric Blood Cancer
Friday:Our Fifth Season as a Team
Saturday:Pediatric Cancer Research – Why Is It Important?
Sunday:A Beautiful Future of Life Lived; Not A Life Lost
For more information about joining your Local Friends Of Heroes Light the night team, please visit www.lightthenight.organd search by your zip code then click join a team and click friends of Heroes. If you already have a team and are interested in becoming and affiliate, please email Carole. Thank you for making our first Blogging For Blood Caner such a great event.
For a chance to win, leave a comment with your favorite post for the week and why it was your favorite.by MIDNIGHT PST today.
You’ll also be entered for our grand prize to be drawn Monday for a $900 Timberland and Lacoste product assortment, courtesy of Samsonite. (Comments are moderated.)
Pediatric Cancer Research – Why Is It Important?
34Welcome to Day 6 of the Blogging for Blood Cancer event! Today’s prize is a Princess purse and ribbon tutu from Pretty Posh Princess. Yesterday’s winner was commenter #9 Denise who knew there were 600 members of Friends of Heroes in 2007.
To qualify to win, leave a comment with an answer to the question after reading the post.
Why is pediatric research so important?
- Joseph Burchenal, M.D., established the chemotherapy program at New York’s Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, now the standard model around the world
- William Dameshek, M.D., considered one of the world’s leading hematologists, was among the first to identify an effective chemo agent.
- Brian Druker, M.D., was a leader in the development of Gleevec®, a revolutionary non-toxic pill that treats chronic myelogenous leukemia and other cancers.
- Emil Frei III, M.D., pioneered curative treatment of acute lymphocytic leukemia, resulting in prolonged survival.
- Robert Peter Gale, M.D., noted leukemia researcher and bone marrow transplant expert who helped clone the gene that causes chronic myelogenous leukemia and developed drug treatments for acute myelogenous leukemia and other leukemias.
- George Hitchings, Ph.D., helped develop 6-mercaptopurine and thioguanine, two of the first and most widely used leukemia drugs.
- George Santos, M.D., was a pioneering bone marrow transplant expert.
- E. Donnall Thomas, M.D., first scientist to successfully perform a bone marrow transplant between two humans.
- C. Gordon Zubrod, M.D., is considered the “father of the clinical trials concept in oncology.” (Our History. 2006. The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. Retrieved from http://www.leukemia-lymphoma.org/all_page?item_id=221384)
In 1960-63, when compared to a person without leukemia, a patient had a 14 percent chance of living five years. By 1975-77, the five-year relative survival rate had jumped to 35 percent. By 2002, the survival rates have increased dramatically large impart due to the wonderful research conducted by The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society and other organizations like them.
- Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL): 65.2 percent overall; 90.5 percent for children under 5;
- Acute myelogenous leukemia (AML): 20.4 percent overall; 53.1 percent for children under 15
- Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma: 81.9% for children under 19
- Hodgkin’s lymphoma: 95.1% for children under 20.
- (Leukemia Facts & Statistics. 2006. The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. Retrieved from http://www.leukemia-lymphoma.org/all_page?item_id=9346)
Even though these survival rates have significantly improved, until there is early detection, a method of prevention, and a cure for blood cancers, research is still desperately needed. Anything less than 100% survival rate just is not good enough, especially when you are talking about someone’s child.
ENTER TO WIN TODAY’S PRIZE:
For a chance to win, leave a comment with the name of the first scientist to successfully perform a bone marrow transplant between two humans by MIDNIGHT PST today.
[Hint, hint, hint: You will find the answer in this post. Wink, wink.]
You’ll also be entered for our grand prize to be drawn Monday for a $900 Timberland and Lacoste product assortment, courtesy of Samsonite. (Comments are moderated.) Make sure to stop back for more information and even more chances to win!

Where do I begin?…This past July marked exactly three and a half years since I lost my 8 year old son, Matthew, to cancer…He will forever be 8 years old in my mind, but his younger brother, Chris, likes to think of his older brother forever being his ‘older’ brother and celebrates Matthew’s birthday each year by putting one additional candle on Matt’s birthday cake…I guess it’s easier for him to handle the loss this way….He needs to feel he will have his older brother, the one who taught him so much while here on Earth, waiting to help guide and protect him once more when he rejoins him in Heaven.






