Skip to navigation Skip to content Skip to footer

Successful Save a Life night

Successful Save a Life night

Thanks to everyone who attended the Save a Life Event.  Use this QR Code to donate to the Solano College American Society Coahes vs Cancer page.

Last Night  we brought awareness to our fight against Cancer, with 3 ways you can do your part.  Education, Action and Donation. 

  1. Education:  receive information about prostate cancer and how to understand your baseline numbers.
  2. Action: complete a cheek swab to enter the Donner Registry for blood cancers and rare diseases. The registry needs all ethnicities to  Match with someone who needs a blood cells donation to survive.
  3. Donation:   Donate to the American Cancer Society for our Coaches vs Cancer event.  Scan the QR code included to Donate

Coaches vs. Cancer

The Coaches vs. Cancer program is a nationwide collaboration between the American Cancer Society and the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC). Since 1993, this initiative has leveraged the personal experiences, community leadership, and professional excellence of coaches nationwide to increase cancer awareness and promote healthy living through year-round awareness efforts, fundraising activities, and advocacy programs.

Every cancer. Every life.

Be the Match

The power to save lives is in your hands. Every three to four minutes, someone in the United States is diagnosed with a blood cancer. Thousands of patients with blood cancers or other diseases need a blood stem cell transplant to survive. 70% of patients needing a transplant don’t have a fully matched donor in their family- that’s when they turn to National Marrow Donation Program. Turn your innate goodness into a limitless, life-saving gift. Learn more and join the blood stem cell registry by visiting the Phi Theta Kappa table in the gym entrance lobby.

Baseline Prostate Cancer Awareness

By educating men in the community about the importance of prostate cancer screening and the risks and benefits of different treatment options, the organization could help increase awareness and understanding of the disease. This could lead to more men getting screened and seeking treatment when needed.