Please turn JavaScript on
Cannonball Kids' cancer icon

Cannonball Kids' cancer

follow.it gives you an easy way to subscribe to Cannonball Kids' cancer's news feed! Click on Follow below and we deliver the updates you want via email, phone or you can read them here on the website on your own news page.

You can also unsubscribe anytime painlessly. You can even combine feeds from Cannonball Kids' cancer with other site's feeds!

Title: Cannonball Kids' cancer – Research is the Key

Is this your feed? Claim it!

Publisher:  Unclaimed!
Message frequency:  0.12 / day

Message History

For many college students, internships are viewed as a stepping stone to gain experience and prepare for a future career. Sometimes, however, an internship can become something more. It becomes an opportunity to discover the kind of work, culture, and impact you want to be part of long after graduation.

In this episode of Game Over: c*ncer, Cannonball Kids’ cancer Foun...


Read full story

In pediatric brain cancer research, progress is driven by collaboration.

In Episode 51 of the Game Over: c*ncer, hosts Dana Nichols and Val Solomon sit down with Dr. John Prensner, pediatric neuro-oncologist, researcher, and Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Michigan Medical School. As the recipient of the 2025 Young Investigator Grant from Cannonb...


Read full story

In Episode 49 of the Game Over: c*ncer, hosts Dana Nichols and Val Solomon sit down with Dr. Elliot Stieglitz, an associate professor of pediatrics at the UCSF School of Medicine and a pediatric hematologist-oncologist who cares for children with difficult-to-treat leukemias, shares what he has learned in his time studying JMML, or juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia. Fro...


Read full story

When you think about childhood cancer treatment, do you imagine a clear path?

Diagnosis. Treatment. Recovery.

It seems simple, that’s how it should be. But for many families, that is not the reality.

Sometimes the first treatment doesn’t work.
Sometimes the cancer comes back.
Sometimes a child relapses again.
And again.

Eventually, some...


Read full story

When most people hear the phrase “cancer research,” they assume all cancers are studied, funded, and treated equally.

You need to know: They aren’t.

Pediatric cancer research exists in an entirely different landscape than adult cancer research:  one with fewer patients, fewer treatment options, fewer pharmaceutical incentives, and dramatically less federal ...


Read full story