William and Jean Hughes
Helping Alberta families restore lives
Laying the foundation for tomorrow’s breakthroughs
If not for research, Paddon Thompson might not be alive
today. Diagnosed with a malignant brain tumour at age 12,
Paddon is the reason behind his family’s major donation to
the Kids Cancer Care Foundation of Alberta. It took seven
years, two major surgeries, many courses of chemotherapy and
radiation treatments but Paddon is cancer free today. He is
now studying engineering at Queen’s University in Kingston,
Ontario.
“My son is a miracle child,” says Joni Hughes, a Calgary
lawyer and KCCFA board member. “Twenty-five years ago the
tumour at the centre of his brain would have been inoperable
but because of advances in medical research, Paddon is now
cancer-free.”
Paddon’s grandparents, William and Jean Hughes, want to
ensure other families will not have to experience what
theirs did, so they gave $750,000 to KCCFA’s We Believe
campaign to help build the new Hughes Children’s Cancer
Research Centre (HCCRC) at the University of Calgary. With
the help of the Hughes family and other generous Calgarians,
KCCFA contributed $1.5 million toward the new centre,
currently under construction.
Equipped with state-of-the-art technology, the HCCRC will
house cancer researchers and doctors who will work
collaboratively to investigate the molecular makeup of
cancers with low survival rates. The hope is that one day
their research will lead to more targeted, less invasive
treatments that will minimize the short- and long-term side
effects of cancer treatments and save children’s lives.
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