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a call to action from the global cancer community


wcd.jpgSign the World Cancer Declaration
Let your voice be heard!

500 organizations and over 4,000 individuals have already signed the declaration. Together we can eliminate cancer as a major threat for future generations. 


 
30 November deadline for capacity-building grants


The UICC cancer capacity-building fund supports efforts to strengthen the work of member organizations in resource-constrained countries in reaching out to local communities with evidence-based activities.

second call for projects was launched on 15 September 2008. Closing date: 30 November 2008.

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1 December deadline for ACSBI fellowships

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UICC American Cancer Society international fellowships for beginning investigators aim to foster a two-way flow of knowledge, experience, expertise, and innovation between countries.

Who can apply? Beginning investigators and clinicians in the early stages of their academic careers.

Research into cancer prevention is especially encouraged.

Application deadline 1 December 2008
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one journey, many people

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The 15th UICC Reach to Recovery International breast cancer support conference will meet in Brisbane, Australia, 13-15 May 2009.

This unique event will provide opportunities for Reach to Recovery volunteers, breast cancer survivors, advocates, family members, health professionals, and all who care for and support breast cancer patients to exchange stories from around the world, sharing different perspectives from the Asia-Pacific, Europe, Latin America, North America, the Middle East and Africa.

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world cancer declaration news

The Lancet Oncology underlines the need for partnership

"The World Cancer Declaration is an ambitious affirmation that needs to resonate with an intensity far greater than that achieved with the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control - the only notable success story up to now in implementing a global public-health policy with potential to decrease the cancer burden." 

Lance Armstrong gets on his bike to fight cancer globallylaf-gci.jpg

For more than 10 years, the Lance Armstrong Foundation (LAF) and its founder, cancer survivor and champion cyclist Lance Armstrong, have partnered with other organizations and dedicated advocates to make cancer a national priority in the United States. Now the LAF has launched a global intiative against cancer and is partnering with UICC in calling for signatures to the World Cancer Declaration.

A platform for European cancer research centres

The World Cancer Declaration should be used as a template for national and regional declarations in which its 11 targets are adapted to the priorities of particular governments, UICC's immediate past president Dr Franco Cavalli told a meeting in Paris in October.

The meeting was intended to advance the movement towards a collaborative platform for cancer research centres in Europe. The Stockholm Declaration (November 2007) recognizes that European cancer research has a strong foundation in biomedical science, good patient registries and biobanks but is still too fragmented to reach the critical mass needed to translate basic research discoveries into clinical settings for the diagnosis and treatment of cancer patients.

In his keynote speech, Dr Cavalli emphasized that research will play a crucial role if we are to meet the World Cancer Declaration's targets by 2020.

The meeting was held under the auspices of Unesco and the Initiative for Science in Europe and funded by the Danish Cancer Society, a UICC member organization.

 
 

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cancer facts
In 2020, if current trends continue, new cases of cancer will increase to 16 million per year and more than 10 million people will die.
 
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