Please help more mums survive breast cancer

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Donations of $2 or more are tax deductible in Australia

WE NEVER STOP NEEDING OUR MOTHER’S LOVE

Too many families lose their mum to breast cancer. You can help mums survive breast cancer this Mother’s Day.

At 55, Jane’s bond with her mum Jean is as strong as ever — and she never takes a moment of it for granted. Together they’ve faced three breast cancer diagnoses. Jean survived. Jane survived. But nine Australian women still die from breast cancer every day, and too many families don’t get the same outcome.

This Mother’s Day, your gift directly funds the clinical trials research working to change that — for every mum, every family, every Mother’s Day that follows.

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Jean and Jane (2024) — together after three diagnoses and a lifetime of love.

Thousands of mums like Jean and Jane are diagnosed with breast cancer every year, and too many don’t survive

There are many mothers among the nine women who die from breast cancer every day in Australia. 

Every loss leaves an anguished family behind. Every death makes our Breast Cancer Trials researchers even more determined to find new treatments and cures. 

We urgently need clinical trials research to find unique solutions for every person, in every situation, every time – until no more lives are cut short.

Will you do something to help every mum this Mother’s Day? 

“When mum called me with the news, my legs just gave way underneath me.” Jane

Jane was just 24 when her mum Jean was first diagnosed with breast cancer for the first time. She got the call at work and couldn’t breathe.

“I was young and thought cancer was something that happened to other people. My mum is going to die.”

As Jean went through chemotherapy and radiation, it seemed to Jane that her mum was fading away.

“I remember being in the kitchen with my arms around Mum, and I was the one crying.”— Jane

 
Jean survived — thanks in part to treatments made possible through clinical trials. Twenty years after her first diagnosis, a routine mammogram found cancer in Jean’s other breast. Jean’s treatment was easier the second time around, and the family thought they were done with breast cancer. Until Jane herself was diagnosed in 2024.

Thankfully, Jane’s breast cancer was caught early, and her treatment was far less brutal than what Jean had endured. That difference is not luck. It is the direct result of decades of clinical trials research, funded by supporters like you.

“The improvement in treatment from mum’s experience to mine is beyond compare. In another ten years, let’s hope we’re even further along.” Jane

Today, at 55, Jane’s bond with Jean is as strong as ever. Three diagnoses. Two women. Still together.

We never stop needing our mums.
Please help more of them survive.

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Jean & Jane (1993)

Through Jean’s first diagnosis and treatment

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Jean & Jane (2026)

Still together to celebrate this Mother’s Day.

“I want people with more difficult breast cancer experiences to be able to be treated as effectively as I was. And for that, more research has to be done"

This Mother’s Day, you can help mums - and daughters, aunts, sisters, and cherished friends – survive breast cancer

Breast cancer research has already saved countless lives and our researchers are making new discoveries every day. But research can only move forward with funding.

Your donation could help:

🌷Find more effective treatments

🌷Develop new options for aggressive breast cancers

🌷Stop breast cancer from coming back

🌷Save more mums’ lives

We never stop needing our Mums.

This Mother’s Day is a reminder of how much our Mums mean to us.
Please donate today to help Mums survive breast cancer. 
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Jean & Jane (1994)

Breast cancer treatment has come a long way since 1994, when Jean was diagnosed the first time. But it hasn’t come far enough.