Science Talk

With our Science Talk blog, we hope to lift the lid on the black box that is the ICR: to show you inside our labs, to introduce you to a few of the people here who make the discoveries, and to allow them to tell some of the stories behind the science. We try to put our discoveries in a wider scientific context, and give an idea of how our science is actually done. We also give you the view from the ICR of important developments in the wider world of cancer research.

10/10/24 - by

Shelley stands smiling behind a desk outdoors with two people in front - one has a Canadian flag draped around her shoulder

Image: Shelley at the Battersea Park event. Credit: Shelley Harding

“Terry Fox was such a hero to me,” Shelley says. “I grew up as a teenager in Barrie, Ontario, watching him run his Marathon of Hope on the news. He was so inspiring and made quite an impact on me. Then as a young woman, now living in Vancouver in the mid 1980s, I volunteered at The Terry Fox Foundation office and met Terry's mother Betty and younger brother Darrell.

Shelley and her son Tom pose for the camera with Terry Fox's brother Fred

Image: Shelley and her son Tom meet Fred Fox (centre). Credit: Shelley Harding

"Terry never wanted to give up"

“At the Canada House reception Fred Fox – Terry’s older brother – shared Terry’s story from his teenage years. He talked about his tenacity in everything he did, the 18 months of chemotherapy he endured and how he never wanted to give up on his Marathon of Hope. Fred continued by sharing how far and wide the Terry Fox Run has grown, raising $900 million (more than £500 million) for cancer research from all over the world!

“Unfortunately, I have experience with cancer myself as I was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2010.

“I was stage two, grade two and I’m just so grateful for the research that’s been done, and is being done, at the ICR.

Shelley and her son Tom pose for the camera wearing official Terry Fox T-shirts

"My treatment was more advanced because of research"

“My aunt had cancer a few years before me and the treatment that I received was more advanced than hers because of research. For example, I was able to have a sentinel node biopsy, which may prevent the need to remove your lymph nodes.

“In my case I needed a mastectomy, chemo, radiotherapy, and then reconstruction surgery. I am so grateful for all the treatment I received, for the NHS, the quality of care and all the hand holding the nurses provided each step of the way.”

Shelley was born in Canada to British parents who both passed away with cancer. She moved to the UK in 2001 and has been here ever since.

“It’s great that the Terry Fox Runs are still going and the money's going to cancer research. Look at all the advances that we've had—it’s amazing.”

Find out more about Terry Fox Runs in the UK.