The $805,000 Ă which includes annual income of $585,000 from a number of cancer-specific endowments and $220,000 raised through the foundationĂs most recent Molly Appeal Ă will support the ±«Óătv Cancer Research Program. Launched in 2001, the ±«Óătv Cancer Research Program is a collaboration of ±«ÓătvĂs Faculty of Medicine, Cancer Care Nova Scotia and the ±«Óătv Medical Research Foundation.
ĂThe ±«Óătv Cancer Research Program provides a coordinated approach to cancer research, an area thatĂs so important to the health of our community,â says foundation Chairman Frank Sobey. ĂWe are grateful for the generosity of our donors throughout the Maritimes. Their confidence in medical research makes this contribution possible.âÂ
The planned Life Sciences Research Institute will provide much-needed research and incubator space for the regionĂs growing life sciences and biotechnology sectors. The Brain Repair Centre will be the lead Life Sciences Research Institute tenant, occupying two-and-a-half floors of the five-storey building. The Brain Repair Centre, which has harnessed the talent of more than 100 scientists and clinicians, is the largest research initiative in the Atlantic Provinces.
The ±«Óătv Medical Research FoundationĂs $2-million funding commitment to the Life Sciences Research Institute comes from its ĂPartners in Medical ResearchĂ program. Through this program, employees of roughly 20 member companies make regular small contributions to the foundation through payroll deductions.
Through fundraising and growing its endowment fund Ă which now stands at $53 million, Atlantic CanadaĂs largest endowment for medical research Ă ±«Óătv Medical Research Foundation provides about $2 million every year to support research in ±«ÓătvĂs Faculty of Medicine and affiliated health-care institutions.
Each year, the Molly Appeal and related special events are dedicated to one of the Faculty of MedicineĂs main areas of research emphasis: cancer, cardiovascular research, neuroscience, and immunity, inflammation and infectious diseases. The next Molly Appeal, to be launched this fall, will target neuroscience.Â