Running Update:
1/3/2018
|
Run
|
5.0 mi
|
51:04
|
1/7/2018
|
Run
|
3.3 mi
|
33:12
|
1/10/2018
|
Run
|
5.0 mi
|
50:21
|
1/12/2018
|
Run
|
5.0 mi
|
45:53
|
1/13/2018
|
Swim
|
2000.0 yd
|
Happy 2018!
It’s a New
Year, so I have a new race schedule and a new fund-raising campaign to end NF! We ended 2017 at $20,989 raised for the Children’s Tumor Foundation
(only $11 short of $21,000!) After much
deliberation over various races (see December’s post), I’ve settled on the same
schedule as last year. So
here are our official 2018 events:
NYC Half Marathon—Sunday, March 18th
Vermont City Marathon—Sunday, May 27th
New Haven Road Race Half Marathon—Monday, September
3rd
Marine Corps Marathon—Sunday, October 28th
You are
welcome to donate early (and often!) to our 2018 campaign: www.KRath4Jane.com
NF Update:
2018 is the
40th anniversary of the Children’s Tumor Foundation! Here
is a brief history of the organization and its mission:
Over the past 40 years, there have been tremendous
advancements in neurofibromatosis (NF) research, many of which can be traced
back to research funded by the Children’s Tumor Foundation (CTF). From the very
beginning, this Foundation was able to achieve a great deal for patients and
families affected by NF. Carefully nurtured relationships between esteemed
medical professionals, talented scientists, compassionate clinicians, generous
financial supporters, tireless volunteers, and committed staff members forged a
path that has brought us to where we are today, at the precipice of what could
be the first FDA-approved drug to treat NF.
In 1978, motivated to create the support group she was longing
for, NF patient Lynne Anne Courtemanche, RN, her physician Allan Rubenstein,
MD, and Joel S. Hirschtritt, Esq. founded the National Neurofibromatosis
Foundation (NNFF). In the early years, the organization was managed and
supported entirely by volunteers who gave generously of their time and talents.
As the Foundation grew, it also engaged individuals and professionals with no
personal connection to NF. The NNFF changed its name in 2005, and today, the
Children’s Tumor Foundation is a highly recognized national nonprofit
foundation and a model for innovative research endeavors.
This year, the Foundation celebrates 40 years of driving
research, expanding knowledge, and advancing care for the NF community.
Collaboration, open data access, and accelerated drug development are our
guiding principles. Today’s CTF connects the unconnected by assembling and
managing a unique collaboration of leading researchers, clinicians, patients,
funders, and pharmaceutical companies with the ultimate goal of accelerating
the development of treatments for NF. CTF has built the research platform that
brings these groups together and is delivering on many NF firsts: advancing the
Synodos consortia, increasing the NF data hub, growing the CTF Biobank, and
expanding the NF Registry. This pioneering approach is grounded in our belief
that this is the better way to fight rare disease.
Our approach also connects patients all over the world. In fact,
patients are always at the heart of everything we do. CTF’s team science
approach focuses on issues chosen by patients themselves, and our patient
outreach, advocacy initiatives, and community events ensure that all NF
patients and their families know that they are not alone in this journey. We’re
proud to have led the way in NF research for the past 40 years, and will
continue to do so for the next 40 if needed, so that NF patients can live their
lives free of the pain and difficulties that come with neurofibromatosis, and
one day, we can end NF.
From the
Children’s Tumor Foundation website, CTF.org
For their 40th
anniversary, CTF released a calendar featuring portraits from its This Is NF photo series. (If you haven’t
seen the series, check it out—the photos are beautiful and the words
inspirational www.ctf.org/understanding-nf/this-is-nf) I was excited to receive my copy of the
calendar in the mail this week! It is
worth pointing out that it highlights adults
living with NF.
I was also pleasantly surprised to find a tiny picture of myself in the
first week of February! What an honor!
You have to look very closely :) |
I’ll keep you all up to date on more 40th anniversary events as they
come up this year :)