50 episódios

Radio Rare is a podcast where we share the stories of those in and around the rare and less common cancer community.

Being diagnosed with a rare cancer doesn’t mean you’re alone. Radio Rare will dive into the human stories of the rare cancer experience, the innovation and the advocacy.

Addressing the feeling of isolation experienced by so many, we look to create a close community of those affected by rare and less common cancers.

Produced by Rare Cancers Australia

Radio Rare Rare Cancers Australia

    • Negócios

Radio Rare is a podcast where we share the stories of those in and around the rare and less common cancer community.

Being diagnosed with a rare cancer doesn’t mean you’re alone. Radio Rare will dive into the human stories of the rare cancer experience, the innovation and the advocacy.

Addressing the feeling of isolation experienced by so many, we look to create a close community of those affected by rare and less common cancers.

Produced by Rare Cancers Australia

    RCA CEO, Christine Cockburn, interviewed with i98 Power FM radio on the need for a pan-tumour approach to cancer care

    RCA CEO, Christine Cockburn, interviewed with i98 Power FM radio on the need for a pan-tumour approach to cancer care

    People living with cancer urgently need action on expanded access to precision therapies

    Over the past two decades, our ability to rapidly obtain genomic information on an individual and their cancer has led to a dramatic shift in how we can diagnose, treat, monitor and prevent cancer, leading to an era of precision oncology.

    With this expanded knowledge of cancer there are several promising treatments that can specifically target the drivers of an individual’s cancer, that are already under review through Australia’s health technology assessment process. Too many people living with cancer in Australia still don’t have access; and they can’t afford to wait.

    • 5 min
    What happens when you are diagnosed with a rare cancer?

    What happens when you are diagnosed with a rare cancer?

    In this edition of The Conversation Hour, hosted by ABC Radio Melbourne, we hear the experiences of callers who have been diagnosed with a rare cancer and their families. We also learn about the latest developments in treatment and support with guests Professor Clare Scott who is a clinician scientist, leading the ovarian and rare cancer laboratory at WEHI and Danielle Spence from the Cancer Council Victoria.



    Credits

    Richelle Hunt, Presenter



    All rights belong to ABC Radio Melbourne.

    • 50 min
    ABC Radio Interview: The cost of treatment for rare cancers

    ABC Radio Interview: The cost of treatment for rare cancers

    Noel Carmona, living with thymic carcinoma, and Rare Cancers Australia CEO Christine Cockburn, sat down with ABC Radio in the Upper Hunter to talk about the cost of treatment for people diagnosed with a rare cancer, and what needs to change to make things fair for rare.

    • 10 min
    Thought Leader Series: Thinking big, how we can make a difference for patients, Professor Grant McArthur

    Thought Leader Series: Thinking big, how we can make a difference for patients, Professor Grant McArthur

    Professor Grant McArthur
    Executive Director, VCCC Alliance
    Head of the Molecular Oncology Lab, Peter Mac

    Thinking big: how we can make a difference for patients

    In this episode, RCA Chief Executive Richard Vines speaks to Professor Grant McArthur about:

    · The challenges of personalising cancer treatment

    · How the moon landing sparked a career in medicine

    · Why he chose to specialise in cancer, and melanoma

    · What gets him out of bed in the morning, and what drives him

    · The vision of the VCCC, and how it came about

    · Why he moved from a full-time research and clinical role to a leadership position

    · The sensitivities around prescribing medications that are not PBS funded

    · The gaps between published evidence, TGA approval and PBS listing

    · Ideas on how to speed up patient access to life-extending and life-saving treatment

    · The challenges and opportunities of developing combination treatments

    · How we can continue to improve cancer outcomes in the next 10 years

    More about Professor Grant McArthur
    Grant is the Executive Director of the VCCC Alliance, a powerful partnership of 10 leading research, academic and clinical institutions, working together to fundamentally reshape the way we tackle cancer. Grant is also Head of the Molecular Oncology Lab at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, and a highly cited melanoma researcher.

    • 29 min
    Thought Leader Series: The future of cancer and medical research, Emeritus Professor Ian Frazer

    Thought Leader Series: The future of cancer and medical research, Emeritus Professor Ian Frazer

    Emeritus Professor Ian Frazer
    University of Queensland
    The future of cancer and medical research
    In this episode, RCA Chief Executive Richard Vines speaks to Professor Ian Frazer about:


    Inventing the technology behind the world’s first cancer vaccine
    Vaccine hesitancy, and the potential of other vaccines for cancer
    What makes the Translational Research Institute so special
    The interface between clinicians, scientists and patients in medical research
    Our expanding understanding of cancer and targeted treatment
    The experience of being Australian of The Year, and what he’s working on now
    How the Medical Research Future Fund works
    The alleged brain drain of medical researchers from Australia
    The need to better embed medical research into the health system
    How he sees medical research benefiting patients in 10 years’ time

    More about Emeritus Professor Ian Frazer
    Ian and his colleague co-invented the technology behind the world’s first cervical cancer vaccine.

    He is the founding CEO of the Translational Research Institute in Brisbane, heads a biotechnology company working on new vaccine technologies, and chairs the advisory board of the Medical Research Future Fund.

    • 29 min
    Thought Leader Series: Improving the patient voice in the Australian health system, Ann Single

    Thought Leader Series: Improving the patient voice in the Australian health system, Ann Single

    Ann Single
    Patient Voice Initiative

    Improving the patient voice in the Australian health system

    In this episode, RCA Chief Executive Richard Vines speaks to Ann Single about:

    - The limitations of Australia’s Health Technology Assessment (HTA) process
    - How and why the HTA process needs to be framed from a patient perspective
    - Australia’s perception of ‘value’ as it applies to health versus other areas like defense
    - The need to embrace uncertainty and speed up patient access to cancer treatments
    - Why she finds HTA fascinating and why she’s optimistic about the HTA Review
    - What she’s learned from 20 years of working with patients
    - Improving the patient voice in the Australian health system
    - Why she moved from journalism to science communication

    More about Ann Single
    Ann is Coordinator of the Patient Voice Initiative, an association that works towards improving the patient voice in the Australian health system. She has more than 20 years of experience in developing policy and practice in patient involvement in health technology assessment, or HTA. Ann is Chair of the HTAi Interest Group for Patient and Citizen Involvement in HTA and has been selected as a consumer representative on the Australian Government’s HTA review.

    • 30 min

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