A $160,000 gift will establish the Trace Richey Nursing Scholarship at Sydney Nursing School.
The scholarship will allow one full-time student or two part-time students each year to complete specialty nursing education through a Master of Cancer and Haematology Nursing degree.
鈥淰ery cheeky, very kind and just generous with his heart. That鈥檚 why I fell in love with him,鈥 is how Neil Pennock describes his partner, Trace Richey.
Trace died of graft-versus-host disease 40 days after receiving a bone marrow transplant for myelodysplastic syndrome 鈥 a type of blood and bone marrow disorder. Now Neil wants to support the education of nurses who care for people with cancer, particularly those receiving bone marrow transplants. The scholarship to support tertiary study was created at the suggestion of a nurse who had cared for Trace during his final 40 days in hospital.
鈥淭he nurses all took such a shine to Trace and I have so much love and gratitude for them,鈥 says Pennock. 鈥淭hey deal with so much trauma and they were all smiles. If that doesn鈥檛 deserve respect, I don鈥檛 know what does.鈥
said, 鈥淚 would love to have met Trace, but this sad experience has brought Mr Pennock to us with a deep understanding that while most funding goes to 鈥榝inding a cure鈥 for cancers, nurses continue to partner in the care of many people diagnosed and treated for different types of cancers every day.鈥
鈥淭his scholarship will offer much needed financial support for more nurses to undertake Masters level education in cancer care and treatment. We are very grateful for this thoughtful gift.鈥
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This scholarship will offer much needed financial support for more nurses to undertake Master's level education in cancer care and treatment
The scholarship is a gift from the TLR Foundation, which Pennock set up in his partner鈥檚 name (the initials stand for Trace Lee Richey). The foundation, which has already supported the construction of a new bone marrow transplant ward at St Vincent鈥檚 Hospital, will focus on promoting bone marrow donation within Australia.
鈥淥ur whole focus is education, especially among younger people who are ideally placed to donate. There鈥檚 a less than five per cent chance that you will ever be called to donate bone marrow if you鈥檙e on the registry but every potential donor makes a match more likely.鈥
It鈥檚 a fitting tribute to Trace whose career was dedicated to fundraising in both America, where he worked with the Susan G Komen Breast Cancer Foundation and the Santa Barbara Rehabilitation Centre and Australia, where he oversaw bequests at the Children鈥檚 Hospital at Westmead and fundraised for Mission Australia.
Typically, during his final stay in hospital, when Trace heard the nurses were shaving their heads to raise money for the Leukaemia Foundation, he pitched in to help beat their $2000 target by $5000. He and Neil also shaved each other鈥檚 heads for the cause.
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