We are celebrating Dr. Hadiyah-Nicole Green - she's blazing a whole new trail in the world of cancer treatments!
When Hadiyah-Nicole Green was in her early twenties, she received news that would change her life forever: Her aunt (pictured here), who had raised her since the age of four, had terminal cancer.
Fearing the effects of chemo and radiation, her aunt chose instead to die without treatment.
Three months after her aunt's death, her uncle was diagnosed with cancer as well – and though he chose to undergo treatment, the chemotherapy and radiation made him seriously ill and were ultimately ineffective.
He died less than a year later.
Though losing her aunt and uncle was devastating, Green decided she would dedicate her life to fighting cancer in their memory – and also to make cancer treatments with less side effects.
Green got a master's degree and then a Ph.D. in physics and turned her interest to lasers. She theorized that lasers could be used to precisely kill cancer cells while leaving the healthier cells intact.
She spent the next three years developing a laser technology that uses nanoparticles to destroy cancer cells.
Green's persistence paid off: she soon became the first person to use nanoparticles to cure cancer in mice, with no observable side effects.
Her ultimate goal is to make this treatment available to human beings.
Green is now hard at work trying to bring her technology to human trials.
She has established the Ora Lee Smith Cancer Research Foundation (named after her late aunt), a non-profit to support her cancer research.
Once her treatment is developed, Green wants to provide the treatment through her non-profit organization rather than sell it to a pharmaceutical company, enabling it to be affordable and accessible to everyone.
Credit: Catherine Thorbecke and Samara Lynn "Black scientist fights to fund her potential cancer laser treatment: Bias in health funding", https://abcnews.go.com/Technology/black-scientist-fights-fund-cancer-research-bias-health/story?id=77832666
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