Celebrating courage: Special accolade for children with cancer
Health / Thu 11th Dec 2025 at 03:34pm
AN AWARD scheme recognising the courage of children and young people diagnosed with cancer has launched in the East of England.

Around 380 children in the region are diagnosed with the disease every year.*
Nominations for the Cancer Research UK for Children & Young People Star Awards are now open and families are being called on to nominate young cancer patients and survivors for the honour in the run up to Christmas.
The Star Awards are open to all under 18s who live in the UK and have been treated for the disease within the past five years.**
There is no judging panel, because Cancer Research UK for Children & Young People believes every child diagnosed with cancer deserves special recognition.
Everyone nominated receives a trophy, £50 TK Maxx gift card,*** t-shirt and a certificate signed by a host of famous faces, including children’s poet and author Joseph Coelho, US singer, dancer and reality TV star JoJo Siwa, pop icon Pixie Lott, TV personality
Dr Ranj and children’s TV favourite Mister Maker. Their siblings also receive a special certificate.
Calling for more nominations across the East of England, Joseph Coelho said: “The Star Awards are a brilliant way to recognise the courage of children who are diagnosed with cancer. They have to go through so much and the Star Awards are a great scheme for
them and their families, to show them that we all think they are so brave.”
Cancer in children and young people is different to cancer in adults, from the types of cancer that affect this age group to the long-term effects of treatment, such as hearing loss and infertility. It needs a different and dedicated approach.
That’s why Cancer Research UK – the biggest charitable funder of research into children’s and young people’s cancers in the UK- is supporting vital work to develop more effective and less toxic treatments.
The Cancer Research UK Cambridge Centre
unites more than 1,000 scientists and clinicians from Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, the University of Cambridge, independent research institutes and pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries in the Cambridge area. One
of the research themes at the centre is investigating children’s and young people’s cancers. Teams in the centre work across the research pipeline, from understanding more about how these cancers start and progress to developing and testing new treatments
for children and young people.
Thanks to research like this and some of the charity’s breakthroughs, children’s cancer survival in the UK has more than doubled since the 1970s.*** But there’s still much further to go.
The Star Awards help shine a light on some of the unique challenges faced by young people with cancer that Cancer Research UK scientists are working to tackle.
Cancer Research UK spokesperson for the East of England, Patrick Keely, said: “We’re driving forward progress, so more children and young people can live longer, better lives, free from the fear of cancer.
“A cancer diagnosis is heart-breaking at any age, but it can be particularly devastating for youngsters – especially when many may experience life-long side effects from their treatment.
“Not only do our Star Awards help to put these inspirational individuals in the spotlight where they belong, they pay tribute to their supportive siblings who deserve to be celebrated too. That’s why we’re urging people to get nominating in the run up to
Christmas, so we can give more incredible young people the recognition they so truly deserve.”
To nominate a star visit cruk.org/starawards
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