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Interested in applying for a St. Baldrick’s Foundation grant? Learn more about the grant application process.
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location: Boston, MA
Institution: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute affiliated with Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Even after being cured, childhood cancer survivors face challenges to living a healthy life, and one major challenge is heart disease. Heart health is closely linked to healthy eating, but many survivors cannot eat as healthily as they want because they don't have access to, or can't afford, healthy foods ("food insecurity"). Dr. Aziz-Bose will enroll survivors in this study to ask what they are eating, and understand whether they experience food insecurity and other conditions that put heart health at risk. Survivors will also be interviewed for their ideas about how to support healthy eating, including the best ways to directly give families healthy foods, an approach called "food is medicine." Using this information, Dr. Aziz-Bose will fine-tune a "food is medicine" intervention that she developed, and test it on a larger scale to see its impact on food insecurity and heart health. The goal being to understand and tackle barriers to healthy eating so all survivors can have the best health possible.
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Loma Linda, CA
Institution: Loma Linda University
The Loma Linda University Children's Hospital (LLUCH) services a four-county region (San Bernardino, Riverside, Inyo and Mono Counties). For the 1.3 million children living in this region, 25% come from families that live in poverty and are uninsured. This population represents 80% of the children treated here. This grant supports a Clinical Research Associate to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure. The participation of this patient population in clinical trials is critical for the identification of therapies that can alleviate this health disparity and effectively treat all children.
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: St. Louis, MO
Institution: SSM Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital affiliated with Saint Louis University
This grant supports a Clinical Research Associate to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Reno, NV
Institution: Renown Regional Medical Center
This grant supports a Clinical Research Associate to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Syracuse, NY
Institution: SUNY Upstate Medical University affiliated with Golisano Children's Hospital, Syracuse
This grant supports a pediatric-focused Clinical Research Coordinator to ensure that the children of central New York have a variety of clinical trials so that they do not have to leave the region to attain this level of care, often their best hope for a cure.
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Cincinnati, OH
Institution: Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center affiliated with University of Cincinnati College of Medicine
Children receiving bone marrow transplant can have serious complication such as bloodstream infections and graft versus host disease and some children die of these complications. Alteration of the bacteria in the gut by treatments including antibiotics is an important cause of these complications. In a previous study Dr. Davies and colleagues have tested the use of human milk to help keep gut bacteria healthy in very young children and found that this treatment worked. They are now studying a purified sugar from human milk, 2-FL that can be given easily as a medicine. Dr. Davies will also test a novel rapid urine test and a blood test to assess health of the gut bacteria during the study. Current tests require a stool sample and can take a long time. This trial will generate the data needed to perform a large-scale multi-center randomized clinical trial that will best prove how well this treatment works.
This grant is generously supported by the Rays of Hope Hero Fund which honors the memory of Rayanna Marrero. She was a happy 3-year-old when she was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL). She successfully battled ALL, but a treatment induced secondary cancer claimed her life at age eight. Rayanna had an amazing attitude and loved life. She, like so many kids facing childhood cancer, did not allow it to define who she was. This Hero Fund aspires to give hope to kids fighting cancer through research.