Welfare

Christie Hospital Manchester

In 1998 we contributed £250,000 to The Christie Hospital in Manchester. Founded in 1901, this institution has been providing support and care for those in the local area as well as being at the forefront of research and treatment, making the Christie Hospital a crucial service to all those in and around the city.

This donation helped the hospital to develop new facilities for teenagers to receive treatment in an age-appropriate environment.

Teenagers with cancer

Teenagers with cancer have different needs to child or adult patient. In most hospitals, teenagers are treated either on a children’s or an adult ward. The teenage years are a particularly difficult time to be hospitalised for an illness such as leukaemia. Hospitalisation removes the young adult from their friends and peers at a critical time in their social development. It is easy for them to feel isolated and left behind.

The Young Oncology Unit

The Young Oncology Unit (YOU) at Christie Hospital provides care for teenagers and young adults (up to 24 years of age) with cancer and related illnesses. Those staying in the YOU enjoy much more flexibility and freedom than paediatric facilities can allow. Flexible visiting rules allow friends and family to come and go as they please and there are communal areas for patients to socialise with each other and with their visitors.

There are a variety of activities on offer and a wide range of electronic equipment – TVs, DVD players, computers, game consoles etc – to help keep patients and their friends entertained. In addition, patients have access to a wide range of services – such as specialist counselling and support and complementary therapies – to help them cope with their illness.

Metabolic analysis of the tumour suppressor protein p73 in medulloblastoma

Medulloblastoma (MB) is the most common malignant brain tumour in children. This project is looking at a protein called

Patient Story – Max

Max was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) in 1993, when he was four years old. Tragically, two

Max sitting in a playground
Summer with dad looking at camera with nasal tube 2

Patient Story – Summer

Summer was diagnosed with high-risk neuroblastoma on 9 May 2023 when she was just nine months old. Her mum

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