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The Leukaemia Foundation provides grants-in-aid for innovative Australian research into the causes, treatment and care of people with leukaemias, lymphomas, myeloma and related blood disorders.
The Leukaemia Foundation's Career Development Program is a key component of our research funding. The program seeks to fund scholarships and fellowships to foster the careers of talented young researchers.
Clinical trials seek to deliver better treatments and cures of leukaemias, lymphomas, myeloma or related disorders. These trials may provide vital information and give people access to new therapies not yet funded by governments.
The Australian Blood Cancer Registry is being developed to collect detailed and accurate information on blood cancers. The information will be used to improve the capacity of clinicians, patients and governments to make informed and timely decisions on the management of blood cancers.
The Leukaemia Foundation funds vital research into the causes, epidemiology, diagnosis and treatment, psychosocial impact and ultimately cures for leukaemias, lymphomas, myeloma and related blood disorders.
The Leukaemia Foundation established Australia's first national haematological tissue bank, the PwC Foundation Leukaemia and Lymphoma Tissue Bank as well as the Leukaemia Foundation Research Unit at the QIMR. We also fund a wide range of research grants, fellowships and scholarships.
Information for the 2009 funding round is available now.
The PwC Foundation Leukaemia and Lymphoma Tissue Bank gives researchers access to accumulated tissue samples of blood disorders and enables research groups to rapidly conduct larger scale studies.
The Leukaemia Foundation Research Unit at the Queensland Institute of Medical Research was established to find cures for blood cancers and related disorders and deliver the benefits to patients as quickly as possible.