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Charities join forces for Teenage and Young Adult Cancer Awareness Month

Charities join forces for Teenage and Young Adult Cancer Awareness Month

This year's theme of 'Innovation' will shine a light on work being done

April is Teenage and Young Adult Cancer Awareness Month (TYACAM).

Over the next few weeks you will see charities and the young people we support come together and raise awareness of the unique set of challenges facing this age group after being told they have cancer.

Around 2,300 young people aged 15-24 – who, already juggling the unique challenges that this
age brings – are diagnosed with cancer each year and have to face the huge impact of its
treatment.

Nineteen charities have come together for the third year of TYACAM to raise awareness of signs and
symptoms in teenagers and young adults (TYA) and the issues they face, and most importantly,
to support young people to share their experiences and ensure their voices are heard.

We’ll also be sharing how we, as individual organisations and as a collective, support young
people with cancer, and, with the theme of this year’s TYACAM being ‘Innovation’, will be
shining a light on some of the new and inventive work being done to improve their cancer
experience from the point of diagnosis, through treatment and beyond.

Shaumya Kularajan, TYACAM steering group patient representative, said: “I'm really proud to be
involved in TYACAM 2025 – it gets bigger and better every year!

“It's so important to have an awareness month focused on teenagers and young adults because
we face a unique set of challenges on top of the weight of a cancer diagnosis and have a lot of
life left afterwards to deal with the long-term effects and psychological impacts of cancer and
its treatment.

“I hope that TYACAM will allow us to celebrate progress and build on the work done so far, and
that we’re able to all learn from each other and raise awareness in the public.

“Innovation is a crucial part of finding new ways to make an unimaginable diagnosis less
painful, with kinder, better treatments and the holistic support that young people so deeply
deserve.”

Ashley Ball-Gamble, Chief Executive at CCLG: The Children & Young People’s Cancer
Association and Chair of the Children and Young People’s Cancer Coalition, said: “As Teenage
and Young Adult Cancer Awareness Month continues to grow, it allows us to further raise
awareness of the unique issues young people face when diagnosed with cancer.

“As the UK’s professional association for those involved in their treatment and care, CCLG
brings together the brightest minds in research, health and social care, to foster collaboration
and drive progress.

“Coming together and working collaboratively is the only way we can address some of the
biggest challenges facing teenagers and young adults with cancer.

"In April, we want to give young people with cancer the opportunity to share their experiences and be assured that they are being heard – and to know that together, we are all working toward a better future.

“That’s why, along with our partner charities, we’ve collectively chosen to highlight the innovative work being done to improve the lives of young people with cancer, by ensuring they get the treatment, care and support that they not only need, but deserve.”

The charities supporting Teenage and Young Adult Cancer Awareness Month 2025 are CCLG: The Children’s & Young People’s Cancer Association, Bone Cancer Research Trust, Cancer Research UK, Candlelighters, Dragonfly Cancer Trust, Ella Dawson Foundation, Ellen Macarthur Cancer Trust, Grace Kelly Childhood Cancer Trust, It’s In The Bag, Lennox Children’s Cancer Fund, The Little Princess Trust, Lymphoma Action, Neuroblastoma UK, Project Youth Cancer, Sarcoma UK, Solving Kids Cancer, Teens
Unite Fighting Cancer, Tom Bowdidge Foundation, and Young Lives vs Cancer.

Search #TYACAM to follow Teenage and Young Adult Cancer Awareness Month and find out
how the charities are raising awareness and how you can get involved this April.

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The MBE for voluntary groups was awarded to The Little Princess Trust by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth.