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KALC (Alice 105.9)/Denver Raises Over $1.3 Million For Children s Miracle Network
February 15, 2021 at 1:20 AM (PT)
Raised Over $1.3 Million For Children s Miracle Network
ENTERCOM Hot AC KALC (ALICE 105.9)/DENVER raised over $1.3 million for CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL COLORADO, a proud member of the CHILDREN’S MIRACLE NETWORK®, during “ALICE 105.9 Cares for Kids Radiothon on WEDNESDAY (2/10) and THURSDAY (2/11). The amount donated during the 20th annual radiothon brought the overall fundraising total to over $24 million since 2001.
Throughout the two-day event, programming featured interviews with hospital patients, families of patients, and front-line workers, who shared stories of hope, healing, and navigating through the impact of the COVID-19 crisis.
AUDM will be holding its main event from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. via Zoom on Saturday, Feb. 13 instead of in the Harold D. Melton Student Center due to University-wide COVID guidelines.
UNM Children’s Hospital’s largest annual event is returning to the New Mexico airwaves.
The Children’s Miracle Network at UNM Children’s Hospital is thrilled to announce 100.3 The Peak’s Annual Radiothon, sponsored by Dion’s, will air Friday, Feb. 26 from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. In 2020, 100.3 the Peak’s Radiothon presented by Dion’s raised $220,220 during the two-day event.
This year’s event is joined by the inaugural Feb. Month of Miracles, inviting Lobos and other community members to create an individual or business fundraising page to support UNM Children’s Hospital.
The Month of Miracles is UNM Children’s Hospital’s (UNMCH) inaugural virtual fundraiser leading up to Radiothon 2021. It is a new fundraising campaign allowing people to share the cause, share their own experiences with UNM Children’s Hospital, and ask friends, family, colleagues and community members to donate.
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Gene mutations linked to worse leukemia outcomes in Hispanic and Latino children
A combination of genetic mutations may explain the higher incidence of and poorer outcomes from pediatric leukemia in Hispanic and Latino children, according to Penn State College of Medicine researchers. They said a novel therapeutic drug combination as well as testing for these mutations may help address the disparity.
Hispanic and Latino children are between 1.2 and 1.75 times more likely to develop B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), the most common childhood cancer, than non-Hispanic and Latino children. They also have a 40% higher death rate than their counterparts after correcting for socioeconomic factors. Dr. Sinisa Dovat, a researcher and pediatric oncologist at Penn State Children’s Hospital and Penn State Cancer Institute, partnered with Dr. Gordana Raca of Children’s Hospital Los Angeles and Kimberly J. Payne of Loma Linda University to understand the biology behin