Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia

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Company typeNon-Profit
Founded1996 in Lane Cove NSW
FounderRotary Club of Lane Cove
HeadquartersL3 39-41 Chandos Street
St Leonards NSW 2065
Australia
Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia
Company typeNon-Profit
Founded1996 in Lane Cove NSW
FounderRotary Club of Lane Cove
HeadquartersL3 39-41 Chandos Street
St Leonards NSW 2065
Australia
Key people
Steve Callister (National Chairman)
Chris Hall (National Deputy Chairman)
Professor Jeff Dunn AO (CEO)
Websitepcfa.org.au

Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia is a broad-based community organisation and the peak national body for prostate cancer in Australia. The Foundation is dedicated to reducing the impact of prostate cancer on Australian men, their partners and families, recognising the diversity of the Australian community. Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia receives Government funding for specific projects and relies on the generosity of individuals, the community and partnerships to carry out its work.[1]

Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia was formed in Sydney in 1996. The television personality, Roger Climpson OAM, a member of the Rotary Club of Lane Cove, was treated successfully for prostate cancer in 1994. Roger was concerned by the confusing information available to him at the time of diagnosis and treatment and by the apparent lack of research into the disease being carried out in Australia. In 1996 he persuaded fellow club members to join him in forming the Prostate Cancer Research Foundation (PCRF) to raise funds for research.[citation needed]

Then in 1998 a committee of support group representatives from the greater Sydney and Newcastle area formed the Association of Prostate Cancer Support Groups (APCSG) that had a state focus but hoped to connect support groups nationally.[citation needed]

APCSG led by Max Gardner AM moved to affiliate with PCRF. As this occurred another NSW based fundraising group, the Australian Prostate Cancer Foundation (APCF) also emerged. In 1999 PCRF, APCF and APSCG merged under PCRF's corporate structure and the new name Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia was chosen to reflect the organisation's widened agenda. Within this the APSCG maintained its own identity and autonomy.[citation needed]

It was not until 2001 that the relationship between the national support group movement and PCFA was clearly and formally established. At this point there were 40 support groups across the country. The key pivotal moment was an Inaugural Conference of Affiliated Prostate Cancer Support Groups (organised by PCFA) that provided the first national forum for support group representatives across Australia to connect and devise strategies to address priority issues for prostate cancer survivors and advance the broader movement. At this conference the support groups declared PCFA as the peak national body for prostate cancer and the Association of Prostate Cancer Support Groups became the Support and Advocacy Committee (now known as the National Support Groups Committee) within PCFA's governance structure.[citation needed]

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