SC Reps. Wendell Gilliard and Chip Limehouse Visit Hollings

SC Reps. Gilliard (left) and Limehouse (2nd from right) Visit Hollings                                                 The Hollings Cancer Center was pleased to welcome last Friday SC Rep. Wendell Gilliard (D) and Rep. Chip Limehouse (R). Both men represent parts of Charleston County, with Hollings sitting in Rep. Gilliard’s district. Rep. Gilliard, who was elected to his seat in 2008 after serving 11 years on Charleston City Council, is coming off his first term and we congratulate him. Rep. Limehouse has served in the legislature since 1995.

Our discussion about Hollings’ recent NCI designation led to questions about where we are headed. Our goal is to apply for the NCI’s Comprehensive Cancer Center status in 2014. To do that, we’ll be strengthening our Cancer Prevention & Control program and expanding the breadth of our chemoprevention research. 

This led to questions from Rep. Limehouse about what people should be eating to prevent cancer. Rep. Limehouse was on to something with this topic as disease prevention via diet and lifestyle behaviors is an exciting frontier in many areas of medicine. Hollings has a chemoprevention research program, and we look forward to sharing what our researchers discover about what causes and inhibits cancer.

It’s a priority of mine to stay in touch with our elected leaders in South Carolina and Washington, DC. As part of the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC), Hollings serves the entire state, by way of clinical care and clinical trials, as well as treating patients referred to us from other places.  

Like MUSC, Hollings has been hit hard by the severe budget cuts higher ed. institutions have endured in the last year. MUSC alone suffered a 25% cut to its budget from the state. With state and federal funding scarcer than ever, we must keep lawmakers updated on the work we’re doing here. We want them to know that even in tough economic times, we won’t stop searching for a cure, and we won’t offer patients any less than the very best medical care.

A Message from Hollings Cancer Center Director Dr. Andrew Kraft

    Welcome to the Hollings Cancer Center’s blog, Cancer Connections. This is our newest effort to share news about the latest developments in cancer treatment and research driven by faculty members at the Hollings.  As you think about personal issues related to a cancer diagnosis or just want to know more about the disease, we hope you find this site useful and check in with us often. We’ll be updating it frequently with comments from cancer clinicians and basic science researchers so that you can become the best informed person around.   
 
It’s been an exciting year for Hollings. This spring, we were awarded designation from the
National Cancer Institute (NCI) in recognition of the strength of our research. NCI designation signals that a cancer center is conducting research important enough to contribute to the war on cancer. Hollings is the only NCI center in South Carolina and one of only 65 in the U.S.
 
Research is what distinguishes academic cancer centers like Hollings from cancer centers that focus solely on clinical care.  It is important to note that patients can and do receive excellent care at non-academic facilities everyday. We partner with such groups and hospitals throughout the state and are thankful for these relationships.
 
But it is the academic centers that lead the way in unlocking cancer’s mysteries.
The mission of academic centers is to achieve medical and scientific breakthroughs, deliver them to patients, and to train the next generation of physicians and researchers. Such centers are collections of talented people collaborating to help patients today while searching out or developing better treatments for the future.
 
Physicians, researchers, patients, loved ones, family members and supporters – we’re all in this together. Much work lies ahead, but much progress is being made through cancer research. We have a lot to be optimistic about.


Stay tuned as we bring you up-to-date on cancer from the clinic and research bench.  

      

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