Cure The Future News

Special News

In this section we will be displaying news items – recent interviews with John Rasko, new events or announcements from the research team. It can also be used to promote special requests and merchandise offers or to promote our sponsors involvement.

Giving Time

Giving Time

Time is Money.

As well as the valuable funds needed to facilitate the equipment and researchers needed to pursue the cure for inherited diseases , the work of Cure The Future relies upon the donation of people’s time. Whether it’s helping organise an Event or making a commitment to give regular time at the office, we need your help to Cure The Future.

FundRaising

Fundraising is at the heart of our family charity – the help needed at our fundraising events includes arranging items for auctions, selling tickets or tables, promoting raffle tickets or just welcoming guests as they arrive. Become part of the Cure The Future family and do your bit.

Organise Events

A great way to raise funds and awareness of the work we do is to organise a small event of your own. As well as events that are related to a particular family loss or diagnosis, we are planning a series of smaller Family picnic events which we need help with – so get your family and friends involved in helping support this worthwhile cause.

Donate Time

Everyone has something they can bring to the party. Whether making a regular commitment to do some photocopying or data entry – or packing promotional materials, every bit helps. Decide how much time you have to offer and what skills, experiences and abilities you can add to the team.

Your generous donation of time and skill will help Cure The Future maximise our efforts in raising money and increasing awareness of our vital research.

Stem Cell Tourism

Stem Cell Tourism

THE AUSTRALIAN

Stem cell ‘tourists’ flock to Australia

JOHN ROSS THE AUSTRALIAN –  August 5, 2016

Medical tourism based around questionable, potentially dangerous stem cell techniques has migrated from the Third World to the First World, with Australia boasting one of the biggest proliferations of hard-sell clinics.

A global study has found Australia easily surpasses medical tourism hot spots such as Thailand in the number of stem cell practices marketing services directly to customers.

The study, published this morning in the journal Cell Stem Cell, found clinics in developed countries were exploiting regul atory gaps to make “an extraordinary and implausible range of claims for their offerings”.

The news has emerged weeks after a coroner slammed a Sydney cosmetic surgeon’s exper – imental stem cell therapy, which caused the death of Alzheimer’s disease patient Sheila Drysdale, as “quack” medicine.

“People think you’ve got to fly to Russia, The Philippines or somewhere like that to do your stem cell tourism,” said senior auth or John Rasko of the University of Sydney.

“Overwhelmingly, the US has the largest preponderance of these clinics, (and) advanced economies like Australia, Germany and Italy are now offering these dubious procedures.”

Professor Rasko said the study, which tallied clinics offering their services online in English, was easily the biggest of its type. On a per-capita basis, Australia had more clinics than the US: only Ireland, Singapore and the tax havens of the Cayman Islands and Bahamas had more.

Anti-ageing and skincare procedures were the most common therapies offered, but clinics were vague about the types of stem cells being used, with more than half not indicating a source.

In June, news emerged of an American stroke victim developing a tumour in his back after stem cell treatments overseas.

Professor Rasko said more such cases were inevitable. “This is an unfettered industry … not properly regulated and this direct-to-consumer marketing will only get worse unless regulators hear this wake-up call.”

In March, the Australian Academy of Science called for the closing of a regulatory loophole that allows “autologous” stem cell procedures using patients’ own cells.