Share love and hope this Valentine’s Day by sending a message to the kids at St Jude Children s Research Hospital.
Send a free virtual card to St. Jude cancer patients and make their hearts smile. It s easy and it will only take you a few minutes. Choose a sweet e-card featuring layouts inspired by patient art, and then select a pre-written message, or you can even create your own.
Get started at StJude.org.
Get our free mobile app
Help save more lives at St Jude Children s Research Hospital by becoming a Partner in Hope. It s just $19 a month. Call the Express Employment Phone Bank at
Join the movement by becoming a Partner In Hope, and help save children with cancer and other life-threatening diseases.
All it takes is $19 a month. That s 2 less coffees a week, less than $1 a day. And your monthly gift not only saves lives, it ensures families never receive a bill from St. Jude for treatment, travel, housing or food because all a family should worry about is helping their child live.
1 MONTH OF GIVING
Your first monthly donation helps provide thermometers and other tools necessary for the treatment of St. Jude kids.
6 MONTHS OF GIVING
12 MONTHS OF GIVING
After one year of giving your donation covers the cost of a crucial step in the recovery process access to physical therapy.
St Jude Helping Frankfort Boy Win Battle Against Rare Brain Tumor
A Frankfort boy battled 4 brain surgeries before he turned 12-years-old. The fifth is the one saving his life.
12 years old Ahmed Merdanovic starting getting headaches when he was only 9. He never complained, says mom Jennifer Curtis, who knew something was wrong when he lined up for a fire alarm at school one day. There was no alarm. He was hearing it in his head.
MRI results showed the constant noise Ahmed was hearing was coming from a tumor the size of a softball in his brain. Doctors told us it had blocked the flow of the cerebral spinal fluid, Jennifer says. We were sent to Syracuse immediately. I wanted a second opinion but they told us there was no time. He needed emergency surgery or he d slip into a coma.