CBCnews
Story Tools: E-MAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

Teen gamers blast cancer

Last Updated: Monday, April 10, 2006 | 2:00 PM ET

A non-profit group has created a video game aimed at helping teens and young adults with cancer better understand their disease and how to fight it.

Starting May 1, anyone with cancer who wants the game – called Re-Mission – will be able to get it for free. HopeLab, the non-profit group that developed the game, is giving it away at re-mission.net.

Nearly 3,000 Canadians under the age of 30 are diagnosed every year with cancer. Yet many of them skip their cancer pills because the drugs can make them feel sick, cause hair to fall out or cause pimples.

If drugs aren't taken properly, it can potentially cause a relapse or hamper recovery, doctors say.

Ty Murray, who has leukemia, helped test the game. (CBC)
Ty Murray, who has leukemia, helped test the game. (CBC)

Game helped teen 'feel better about the challenges'

The video game is designed to educate the young patients about why it's important to take the medications on time and other scientific information, including how lymphoma cells crowd out healthy ones.

Ty Murray, a 15-year-old from Calgary who has leukemia, was among 400 young cancer patients who tested the game.

Scene from the video game Re-Mission.
Scene from the video game Re-Mission.

Murray said his illness was discovered while he was on holiday.

"We were just vacationing, and I had a swollen foot and they said I had cancer."

He said the game strengthened his ability to cope with the disease.

"I feel better about the challenges that I'm facing."

The game stars Roxxi, a microscopic robot that roams the body blasting cancer with her sidekick, a holographic computer called Smitty who has all the answers.

It also tests a player's understanding of the disease.

In the trial, the teens who played Re-Mission tended to:

  • Take their medication more regularly.
  • Better understood why they needed to take the drugs.
  • Showed more chemotherapy drugs in their bodies.

Murray said he is now doing better. "I'm glad that I'm in remission cause I can go into a school where all my friends are," he said.

Story Tools: E-MAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

Related

Video

Terry Reith reports for CBC-TV
(Runs: 2:29)

play: RealMedia »
play: RealVideo »
play: QuickTime »

Health Headlines

Canada should screen for abdominal aneurysms in those over 65, group says
Canada should have a national screening program to diagnose potential abdominal aortic aneurysms in men and high-risk women aged 65 and older, the Canadian Society for Vascular Surgery says.
C-section reduces mother's response to baby: study
Mothers who push to give birth may be more responsive to the cry of their babies than those mothers who elect to have a caesarean birth, a brain-scanning study suggests.
Food watchdog updates cheese recall for listeriosis
Canada's food watchdog has released an updated list of cheeses recalled by Ivanhoe Cheese Inc. for listeriosis contamination.
Camps for kids with cancer, disabilities, served recalled meat
About 480 children in New Brunswick who attended summer camps for sick and physically disabled kids may have eaten meat products since recalled for listeria contamination.
New study finds no link between measles vaccine and autism
New research further debunks any link between measles vaccine and autism, work that comes as the United States is experiencing a surge in measles cases fuelled by children left unvaccinated.

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Ellard conviction overturned in death of Victoria teen Reena Virk
The B.C. Court of Appeal has overturned Kelly Ellard's second-degree murder conviction and ordered a fourth trial for her in the death of teenager Reena Virk, who was found beaten and drowned in a Victoria waterway in 1997.
Greens tops, Tories flops in Sierra Club climate-change report card
The Sierra Club of Canada gives top marks to the Green party and a failing grade to the Conservatives in its ranking of parties' climate-change platforms.
Emerson to co-chair Tory election campaign
Liberal-turned-Tory David Emerson will co-chair the Conservatives' national campaign in the looming election.
U.S. home foreclosures hit new high
An industry group says a record 9.2 per cent of U.S. homeowners with a mortgage were either behind on their payments or in foreclosure at the end of June, as damage from the housing crisis continues to mount.
August jobless rate steady at 6.1%
Following the loss of 55,000 jobs in July, the Canadian economy added 15,000 jobs during August, Statistics Canada said Friday.