Emmy Winner Uzo Aduba, Stand Up To Cancer And Count Me In Join Forces
Ambassador and Emmy® Award and SAG Award winning actress, Uzo Aduba have teamed up for a new public service announcement (PSA) to educate and encourage all cancer patients to opt-in to sharing their unique experiences and health information to help accelerate the pace of cancer
research and propel new discoveries.
information, samples, and voices. This information can play an important role in cancer research by increasing the pool of data available to help researchers accelerate new treatment strategies. The PSA launches in September and will run
in print, digital, radio and out-ofhome media outlets.
I lost my mother to pancreatic cancer and have other family members who have been affected by this disease,” said Aduba. “I’m proud to lend my support to this campaign to encourage patients, especially from minority communities, to share their personal stories to help researchers discover breakthrough cancer treatments that are effective for all.”
awareness and encourage cancer patients to share their data and unique cancer experiences,” said Stand Up To Cancer CEO Sung Poblete, PhD, RN. “We hope this collaborative effort will increase the number of cancer patients participating in research so we can continue to break down barriers in cancer research and make additional advancements in treatment options.”
Black and In Treatment, has been supporting Stand Up To Cancer since 2018. Aduba appeared in the 2018 and 2021 SU2C Biennial Telecasts and participated in several SU2C social media campaigns as well as the 2019 “For All The
Moments We Stand Up” campaign in collaboration with founding donor, Major League Baseball.
-- and all communities should have the opportunity to participate in and contribute to research. Count Me In was established so that every person affected by cancer can contribute their unique information to the research breakthroughs that will ultimately lead to better treatments, improved care and longer lives, said Nikhil Wagle, MD, director of Count Me In and a medical oncologist and
cancer researcher at Dana-Farber and the Broad Institute. “We are incredibly grateful to Stand Up To Cancer and Uzo Aduba for partnering with us in this effort and for their efforts to break down barriers in order for all patients to benefit from new discoveries and treatments.”
Emerson Collective, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, and
the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and aims to engage more than 100,000 patients living with all major and rare cancer types.
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