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The American Cancer Society was founded in 1913 by 10 doctors and 5 laypeople in New York City.
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Philanthropist Mary Lasker and her colleagues revolutionize the Society’s mission and fundraising efforts, helping to raise more than $4 million – $1 million of which was used to establish the program.
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American Cancer Society-funded researcher Sidney Farber, MD, produces remissions in children with leukemia.
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The American Cancer Society pushes for wide adoption of the Pap test that has resulted in a 70% decrease in uterine and cervical cancer.
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An American Cancer Society study confirms the link between smoking and lung cancer. Additional smoking prevention work helps lead to a 50% decrease in smoking and a reduction in the death rate from lung cancer. This launches an era of cancer prevention research at the Society.
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Volunteer Margot Freudenberg helps open what today has become a home away from home for cancer patients and their caregivers nationwide who need a free, temporary place to stay when traveling away from home for treatment.
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The American Cancer Society plays a leading role in the passage of this act, which is considered the most dramatic piece of health legislation ever enacted. It led to federal funding for cancer research rising from $4.3 million in 1953 to an estimated $5.1 billion in 2012.
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The American Cancer Society invests in a mammography study that demonstrates it is a safe and effective tool for the early detection of breast cancer.
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The American Cancer Society hosts an event in California to help nearly 1 million smokers quit for the day. The following year, the Society takes the program nationwide, and it continues to challenge people to stop using tobacco and provide them support to quit today.
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Cancer Information Specialists begin serving patients and their families 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Today, the American Cancer Society provides free information, answers, and support to nearly 1 million people facing cancer who call each year
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Former American Cancer Society grantee Brian Druker, MD, reports stunning success in treating chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) with a molecularly targeted drug (Gleevec), launching a new era of molecularly targeted treatments.
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American Cancer Society researchers confirm that being overweight or obese contributes to many types of cancer.
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This brings the total number of Society-funded Nobel Prize winners to 46. Photo by Tim Kelly courtesy of the University of Utah.
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This translates to 1.2 million lives saved from cancer between 1991 and 2009.