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Dal community runs for a cure

Rain coats and pink ribbons flood the Halifax Commons last Sunday for 'Run for the Cure'

- October 6, 2011

Photo courtesy of the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation
Photo courtesy of the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation

Not even a hurricane could stop breast cancer survivors and supporters from lining up at the start line and waiting for the announcer to yell ā€˜goā€™ at this yearā€™s annual ā€˜Run for the Cureā€™ ā€“ a yearly fundraiser organized by the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation that gives men, women, and children a chance to run (or walk) in honour of a loved one affected by breast cancer.

»ĘÉ«Ö±²„ was well represented at the event with 16 teams including participants from nursing, medicine, management, occupational therapy, human communication disorders, physiotherapy, law, arts and social sciences along with Dal sports teams, residences, and sororities.

Ashley Drohan, a second year student in medicine and one of the team captains of "Dal Med", raised $1,840 on her own. She says that despite the rain, the run went great.

ā€œOur team consisted of 19 people and we raised $2,075!ā€ she says. ā€œIt was really great to see so many people show up for the run and demonstrate their commitment to finding a cure for breast cancer.ā€

Kathryn Shaw, captain of "Team Tittiesā€ raised $2,150 all on her own and her team raised $3,745. Ms. Shaw, whoā€™s been participating in the run for the last six years, says sheā€™s thrilled at how itā€™s become a cross-Canada event that brings together so many people in the name of a fantastic cause.

Ā Team "WOW"

Team member for , Dr. Jacqueline Gahagan, professor in the Department of Health Promotion at »ĘÉ«Ö±²„, has been participating since 1999 and says thereā€™s been a gradual diversity of participants and more of a focus on survivors.

ā€œSince 1999, thereā€™s been greater visibility and more people are getting involved,ā€ she explains. ā€œThereā€™s more families, more kids, more youth, more university teams. I even saw a young menā€™s hockey team running this year.ā€

As founding chairperson of WOW, Prof. Gahagan and her team raised over $3,000. She was pleased to see the amount of energy despite the less than ideal weather.Ā 

ā€œIt was a cold and rainy Sunday where people could have said, ā€˜Forget it, Iā€™m sleeping in' ā€“ but there was such a huge, energetic crowd there and everyone was so happy and peppered up. It was pretty spectacular.ā€

Sharing the same goals

Third year nursing student, Denyne Park of team "Dal Nursing" was thrilled she beat her personal goal and raised $2,746 receiving the Halifax award for post-secondary individual fundraiser. As a team of 82 participants including students and faculty, "Dal Nursing" raised a whopping $10,471.50!

ā€œThis was our first year competing in the CBCF Post-Secondary Challenge and »ĘÉ«Ö±²„ came in third place across the country,ā€ Ms. Park explains. ā€œThis is so amazing and we should be really proud of our students and faculty for their commitment to philanthropy, community involvement, and health promotion.ā€

ā€œThe Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation CIBC Run for the Cure is extremely thrilled with the support and fundraising efforts of students, faculty, alumni and staff involved in the Post-Secondary Challenge (PSC) in Atlantic Canada,ā€ says Kelly Hudson, CBCF event coordinator for the Atlantic region. Ā ā€œThe PSC was created to encourage participation at the post-secondary level and it was definitely a huge success! Schools take pleasure in rivaling each other and teams of any level seem to love a good challenge. It was a great way to show community spirit and involvement and to raise funds for a worthwhile cause. ā€œ

Next year, Ms. Park hopes to beat the $10,000 mark and attract more participants to her team.

ā€œWe run because many of us have been touched by breast cancer in our personal and professional lives,ā€ she states. Ā ā€œAnd as the future nurses of Canada, we share the same goal as the CBCF - to someday live in a world that is free of breast cancer.ā€ Ā