In 2019 I had the privilege of walking the Great Wall of China with some amazing people who had raised money for medical research. Since then I have read about some of the exciting work that is progressing at the Perkins. There is Pilar's work on bee venom that is promising in killing the hardest breast cancer to treat. There is Brendon's work that looks promising in increasing the likelihood of all cancer being removed during surgery. Dad would be delighted in this work that is happening in WA, but humbled that the institute he argued for now bears his name.
Unfortunately since doing my China walk, two friends have also been diagnosed with breast cancer.
This year, I’m committing to help the amazing women’s cancer researchers at WA’s Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research. I’m training, fundraising and walking to support this cause. And I’d be so grateful for your support.
If you can’t join me (I’d love the company), please give generously to my fundraising page.
The Perkins is dedicated to helping the women in our lives. They’re focused on pioneering medical breakthroughs and discovering new treatments for this disease and they won’t stop until cancer is history. That means so much to me. Please help me, help them.
It was a real inspiration few weeks ago to be at a talk on melanoma at the Harry Perkins institute. We had a researcher from the institute and a patient who had benefited amazingly from a clinical trial. To see these two gentlemen sitting before us sharing their journeys shows first hand that research conducted in WA can help people in WA quickly.
Let’s do this. Because cancer ends with me.
Cancer ends with me!
In 2019 I had the privilege of walking the Great Wall of China with some amazing people who had raised money for medical research. Since then I have read about some of the exciting work that is progressing at the Perkins. There is Pilar's work on bee venom that is promising in killing the hardest breast cancer to treat. There is Brendon's work that looks promising in increasing the likelihood of all cancer being removed during surgery. Dad would be delighted in this work that is happening in WA, but humbled that the institute he argued for now bears his name.
Unfortunately since doing my China walk, two friends have also been diagnosed with breast cancer.
This year, I’m committing to help the amazing women’s cancer researchers at WA’s Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research. I’m training, fundraising and walking to support this cause. And I’d be so grateful for your support.
If you can’t join me (I’d love the company), please give generously to my fundraising page.
The Perkins is dedicated to helping the women in our lives. They’re focused on pioneering medical breakthroughs and discovering new treatments for this disease and they won’t stop until cancer is history. That means so much to me. Please help me, help them.
It was a real inspiration few weeks ago to be at a talk on melanoma at the Harry Perkins institute. We had a researcher from the institute and a patient who had benefited amazingly from a clinical trial. To see these two gentlemen sitting before us sharing their journeys shows first hand that research conducted in WA can help people in WA quickly.
Let’s do this. Because cancer ends with me.
Please help me, help the Perkins.
Your Impact
So far this year I helped provide…

380
hours of medical research

736
per researcher equipped with protective clothing

1514
per microscope slide