Newsweek The Wall Street Journal Washington Post Time Magazine Donate Now!
 
I'm Too Young For This! Cancer Foundation
Follow Us On Twitter
connect involve about programs radio forums blog shop give
 
ABOUT US

The I'm Too Young For This! Cancer Foundation is the nation's largest support community for young adults affected by cancer (15-40) and serves as a bullhorn for the young adult cancer movement.

A TIME Magazine Best 50 Website, FOX News Top 10 Healthcare Blog and winner of "Most Innovative Use Of Social Media In The World 2011" by the Classy Awards, we support a global network of survivors, caregivers, providers and advocates to ensure that no young adult goes unaware of the age-appropriate resources they are entitled to so they can get busy living.

Our innovative and multi-award-winning programs—such as The Stupid Cancer Show, the OMG! Cancer Summit For Young Adults and the Stupid Cancer Boot Camp—have brought the cause of 'cancer under 40' to the national spotlight and rallied a brand new generation of activists to give a much needed voice to our forgotten population. Stupid cancer. Survivors rule.
 

Our mission is to empower young adults affected by cancer by:
    •  building community
    •  improving quality of life
    •  providing meaningful survivorship
Our vision is no survivor alone.
Our charter is to ensure that no young adult goes unaware of the support resources they are entitled to so they can get busy living.
 

The I'm Too Young For This! Cancer Foundation was borne out of an inequity. In 1995, at the age of 21, concert pianist, composer and college Senior Matthew Zachary was diagnosed with pediatric brain cancer and told he'd likely not survive six months let alone never perform again. He and his family were thrust into a cancer landscape much different than today.

The Internet was in its infancy, cancer resources for young adults were few and far between and 'surviving' meant living beyond five years. Although Matthew and his family were offered comfort through a small, fragmented community, they were not able to benefit from many of today's surviorship resources. Like millions of other families, they had to go it on their own and hope for the best.

Since 1996, there has been an upsurge of young adult advocacy organizations whose programs, tools and services are specifically directed at the unique needs of those aged 15-39. Many of these groups were founded by young survivors like Matthew. Unfortunately, 10 years later in 2006, despite living in an age of unbridled interconnectivity and global communications, most young adults affected by cancer (and their caregivers) are simply not aware of—and therefore do not even have the option to access—the myriad of resources at their disposal — and this is a shame.

In 2004, Matthew founded Steps For Living (which became I'm Too Young For This! Cancer Foundation in 2007), a progressive social enterprise that linked his worlds of music, cancer advocacy, consumer health marketing and technology to ensure that young adults affected by cancer would have the opportunity to benefit from community and support resources that he and his family only wished they had in 1995.

Today, I'm Too Young For This! is the nation's largest support organization in the United States with a global following and hundreds of thousands of friends, fans, readers, listeners and members. A hip and edgy lifestyle brand for the youth culture, the foundation has been recognized as a innovator at the nexus of social media and health technology, garnering international accredidation throughout the cancer continuum. In addition to being named a TIME Magazine Best 50 Website, the organization was named a Top 10 Healthcare Blog for 2010 by FOX News and accredited by the Washington Post as "an unparalleled resource for cancer patients in their teens, 20s and 30s."

Over the past four years of operation, the foundation has forged alliances with national public health institutions and young adult advocacy organizations, launched the Web's premiere young adult community resource website, organized the first national coalition of young adult musician-survivors, nationalized an annual young adult cancer conference and socially mobilized tens of thousands of young adults affected by cancer to a progressive new movement that is demanding change from an establishment that they have been ignored by for far too long.

The Stupid Cancer Show LIVE Mondays @8pm ET/PT  
 
 
Stupid Cancer Road Trip FINALE!
The Stupid Cancer Road Trip—sponsored by Volkswagen—came to a fantastic end to kickoff the OMG! Cancer Summit. Check out the finale video! [Website]
 
Stupid Cancer Show wins StayClassy Award!
The Stupid Cancer Show won "Most Innovative Use Of Social Media" at the 2011 Stay Classy Awards in San Diego on Saturday, September 17th. This prestigious honor only further solidifies our broadcast as a paradigm shifting media platform in healthcare. Thank you to Stay Classy and the thousands of fans out there who voted for us and made this possible! [Website]
 
Our Review of 50/50
After attending an advanced screening, and with permission from Summit Entertainment, Matthew Zachary is proud to share his official "he's not a film critic" review of the game-changing cancer comedy flick, 50/50 [StupidCancerBlog]
A Conversation With Matthew Zachary
Writer Edward Winstead of the prestigious NCI Bulletin (a publication of the National Cancer Institute) recently sat down with i[2]y CEO Matthew Zachary to get the low down on what he's got up his sleeve for the growing young adult cancer movement [NationalCancerInstitute]