Robert Connor Dawes Foundation

The Robert Connor Dawes Foundation is an Australian not-for-profit organisation that facilitates funding in brain research, care and development in Australia and the United States. The foundation was created in June 2013 by Liz Dawes and Scott Dawes in memory of their son Robert Connor Dawes who died from a brain tumour in April 2013 at 18 years of age.[1] As of July 31, 2015, they changed their name from Robert Connor Dawes Fund to Robert Connor Dawes Foundation.[2]

Robert Connor Dawes Foundation
FoundedJune 2013 (2013-06)
FoundersLiz and Scott Dawes
TypeNGO
Registration no.ABN 49126106682
Focuspediatric brain research and care
Location
  • Sandringham, Victoria, Australia
Area served
Australia & USA
Volunteers
250
Websitercdfoundation.org
Formerly called
Robert Connor Dawes Fund

Overview edit

Funds raised go towards research to further understand and more completely treat brain tumours, including earlier detection, surgery and post-surgery treatments at the Royal Children’s Hospital, the Murdoch Children's Research Institute, the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Children's Cancer Institute of Australia and the Monash Medical Centre.[3] The foundation also supports the work of The CERN Foundation.[4] The main source of fundraising is the annual Connor's Run which has raised $2.7 million since 2013 and has become the largest event for paediatric brain cancer in Australia.[5] The event was recognised by the Bayside City Council in 2014 as the Best Community Event of the Year.[6] Their main event in the United States is Connor's Erg Challenge.[7][8] In 2014, the foundation launched Victoria's first Brain Week to raise awareness of brain cancer and source research funding, which is now in its third year.[9][10]

Ambassadors edit

Lisa McCune, James Tomkins, Olivia Wells, Tamsyn Lewis, Dave Hughes, Feliks Zemdegs, Sean McMahon and Charlie Carrington are ambassadors.[11][12]

Events edit

Connor's Run edit

Connor's Run, held in September is the foundation's largest event. The 2019 event was the biggest to date, with over 5000 participants, and raising over $1.2 million. In seven years, the event has raised $4.3 million to support research into paediatric brain cancer.[13]

RCD Foundation initiatives edit

AIM Brain Project edit

In 2017 the Federal Government, along with the Australian and New Zealand Children’s Haematology/Oncology Group made the announcement that they would be co-funding the AIM Brain Project along with the Robert Connor Dawes Foundation over four years.[14] The project is an Australian-first Robert Connor Dawes Foundation initiative that provides access to world-leading research technology, led by Dr Stefan Pfister at the German Cancer Research Centre, and will help doctors better understand and classify individual brain tumours. With a clearer understanding of each tumour, specialists can create better, personalised treatments not just based on tumour type, but on its actual molecular build. In January 2019, Carrie Bickmore's charity, Carrie's Beanies 4 Brain Cancer (CB4BC) announced that they would contribute more than $500,000 to the cause.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ Tuohy, Wendy (15 September 2013). "What one brave mum who lost a son did next…". Herald Sun. Melbourne.
  2. ^ Dawes, Liz (31 July 2015). "It's Our 2 Year Anniversary… Let's Celebrate With A New Name!".
  3. ^ Sexton, Fiona (15 September 2014). "Sandringham fun run rakes in $275K for brain cancer research". Bayside Leader. Blackburn, Victoria.
  4. ^ "Building a Legacy in Honour of Connor Dawes". CERN Foundation. Zionsville, Indiana, USA. 10 April 2014.
  5. ^ Schelle, Caroline (15 September 2015). "Third annual Connor's Run raises $400,000 for brain cancer research". Herald Sun. Melbourne.
  6. ^ Andrews, Jon (26 January 2014). "Bayside Council awards its best at Australia Day awards ceremony". Bayside Leader. Blackburn, Victoria.
  7. ^ "Connor's Ergo Challenge". Stanford University. 17 August 2015.
  8. ^ "SU rowing enters competition to raise money for brain cancer research". LOCALSYR. 2019-02-13. Retrieved 2019-02-14.
  9. ^ Miller, Zach (26 April 2014). "Youth join forces to fight cancer". Monash University.
  10. ^ "Brain cancer is leading cause of cancer death in young people". Cancer Council NSW.
  11. ^ Prime, Toby (1 May 2015). "School representatives line up to challenge former Rubik's cube world champion". Melbourne Leader.
  12. ^ Tuohy, Wendy (15 September 2013). "What one brave mum who lost a son did next…". Herald Sun.
  13. ^ Joyce, Clare (2020-07-08). "Reimagining peer-to-peer fundraising event Connor's Run". Fundraising & Philanthropy Australasia Magazine. Retrieved 2020-07-27.
  14. ^ "Funding for AIM Brain announced". www.anzchog.org. Retrieved 2019-02-14.
  15. ^ "Carrie Bickmore's boost for brain cancer research". www.news.com.au. Retrieved 2019-02-14.