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What if fighting cancer was as easy as destroying leukemia cells with a chemo-blaster or demolishing brain tumors with a powerful rocket? It is that simple and fun with Re-Mission, a video game conceived and designed in part by the Health Science Center’s Brad Pollock, Ph.D., professor and chair of epidemiology and biostatistics. |
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Re-Mission players direct Roxxi, a tiny nanobot warrior, as she travels through the human body on her mission to seek and destroy cancer and the negative side effects of cancer treatment. |
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The first video game of its kind in the world, Re-Mission was initiated and funded six years ago by a nonprofit organization called HopeLab. The game’s goal is to help adolescents and young adults (14-30 years old) with cancer to better understand their disease and to learn to manage it better. |
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"The challenge with teenagers is that they don’t want to take their medications or show up for their doctor’s appointments," Dr. Pollock said. "This game is designed to encourage them to adhere to their prescribed therapies so that their survival odds are improved and so they can better manage their treatment to reduce negative side effects and thus have better quality of life."
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