Virtually everyone has been touched by cancer in some way. Mary Kay’s
personal encounter came in 1980 when her husband, Mel Ash, died of lung
cancer. Subsequently, each time a member of the extended Mary Kay family
was diagnosed, she became even more determined to work to find a cure.
In 1987, Mary Kay decided to put her money where her heart was and asked
the independent sales force and employees at Mary Kay Inc. to do the
same. Together they began raising funds for cancer research, and in 1996,
the Mary Kay Ash Charitable Foundation was established to formalize
the raising and distributing of research funds for cancers affecting
women.
Cancer by the numbers
This year, 211,000 women in the U.S. will be diagnosed with breast cancer,
the most common type among women, excluding skin cancer. Another 80,000
women will be diagnosed with a cancer of the reproductive organs. According
to the American Cancer Society, one-third of all women will face a
diagnosis of cancer in their lifetimes. Fortunately, the odds of recovery
today have increased dramatically, thanks to the medical advances and
scientific breakthroughs that philanthropies such as the Mary Kay Ash
Charitable Foundation are helping to support.
Click here to
learn more about the cancer research studies conducted by the medical
scientists supported by the Mary Kay Ash Charitable Foundation.
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