Sign up and show your support for young people
Sign up and show your support for young people living
with cancer
CanTeen ambassadors
including Dan Carter, Maria Tutaia, Paige Hareb, Lisa Tamati
and Scott Dixon will be amongst the first New Zealanders to
sign a petition to show their support for the International
Charter of Rights for Young People with Cancer on June
8.
The New Zealand launch of the Charter follows the international launch at the Royal College of Surgeons in London, England, on Monday New Zealand time.
For New Zealand, the charter aims to ensure the voices of young people between 13 and 24 years old are heard and their circumstances improved, through a set of ten rights that address their unique needs, says CanTeen CEO David Pearce.
These include the right to:
• Receive
education about cancer and its prevention including early
detection
• Have access to suitably qualified
multi-disciplinary medical specialists with significant
experience in treating cancer in this age
group
• Receive age-appropriate support including, but
not limited to, psychosocial, community and palliative
support services
• Fertility preservation, as well as
information and counseling concerning short-term and
long-term effects of cancer and treatment which affect
fertility
Mr Pearce says the charter is an international initiative, the result of a collaboration of like-minded organisations, including the Lance Armstrong Foundation in the USA and the Teenage Cancer Trust in the UK, joining forces to advance the rights of young people living with cancer around the world.
“Now that the charter has been launched we’re asking people from all walks of life around the world to sign a petition via the dedicated website www.cancercharter.org. We’re expecting more than 100,000 people to sign up in the coming weeks.”
The charter has the support of the Ministry of Health, which with CanTeen also recently launched its Adolescent and Young Adult (AYA) Service Specification to address the gap in treatment for young people with cancer.
ENDS