From the World Child Cancer newsletter
“Our success at increasing our income last year means that we are able to launch new projects. Funding will start this month for a new project in Cameroon led by Professor Hesseling from South Africa. In March Professor Tim Eden, Medical Trustee, and other colleagues will visit Bangladesh to develop a new project in Dhaka…
Wheelchair appeal
Once again the good folk of Northamptonshire have come to the aid of the Trust. Since our item in this website in November 2011, ten chairs have been donated. Sadly two were faulty and too expensive to repair. Two others required a repaint with Hammerite silver. In all we have 8 perfectly respectable, serviceable wheelchairs.…
Newsletter
Many of you will remember the “Beryl Thyer Bulletin”. Peter McCormick’s sons Richard and David – now trustees – have created this website where you can find up to date news of our children’s cancer treatment programmes at the 3 Baptist Hospitals in Cameroon. My recent visit to Cameroon (November 22nd to December 6th) with Prof…
Is it witchcraft?
We have treated over 700 children with Burkitt’s lymphoma at the 3 Baptist hospitals of N.W. and S.W. Cameroon. The one year survival of these children is over 60%: relapse rate after one year is less than 5%. These are the best treatment results recorded in resource-poor African hospitals and a great credit to the…
A message from Dr Francine
Greetings to all our supporters everywhere! Yesterday evening I was reading a topic in SIOP News Issue no 41, entitled “Paediatric oncology in Developing Countries: How can the SIOP and ASPHO membership collaborate?” Some of the points mentioned included career opportunities, funding, establishing programmes, feasibility of treatment, and demonstrating ‘twinning’ approaches. As I was reading…
One Sunday in Mbingo
Yesterday Prof Hesseling and I attended a meeting of The N.W. Cameroon Parent Organisation (i.e., parents of children with cancer) here at Mbingo – which we helped to establish in May of this year. One pa had travelled all the way from Mutengene in the S.W. I saw this man in May when he showed …
Brief messages from Dr Paul in Cameroon
One Today has been an exciting day. Prof Hesseling, nurses Glenn and Vera and I travelled to a small village called Ntada where parents of 3 children treated for Burkitt’s lymphoma awaited us. All 3 children were well. The parents will form the nucleus of a new parent group which will teach villagers to recognise…
Sock Monkeys from St Andrew’s
St Andrew’s C of E Church, Kettering, is one which was represented at the Synod I spoke at in September (see ‘help from on high’). The clergy and congregation there have responded, and have certainly put heart and soul into helping our Trust. This evening was the first of two days of St Andrew’s Community…
WANTED – WHEELCHAIRS
Wheelchairs are always needed in our Cameroonian hospitals. I have observed some pretty ropey ones donated from the North American continent. BTMAT’s own donated wheelchairs have been from NHS Kettering General Hospital Trust’s warehouse, and consisted of items which were time-expired, and could not, by the Hospital’s rules, be loaned out again. Pity that, because…
’Arf a sixpence
When I was 14, and wide-eyed at the novelty of puberty, all of 58 years ago, I studied ‘Kipps’, by HG Wells, for O Level English Lit., at Manchester Central Grammar School for Boys, Whitworth Street, Manchester. Decades later Tommy Steele carried the story onward, as a rather good show with the name ’arf a…