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We Support

We provide a wide range of support and information to New Zealanders and their families who are experiencing breast cancer.

We Inform

We provide up to date information to empower those with breast cancer to make informed choices about their treatment and care.

We Represent

We provide a voice for those with breast cancer to ensure world-class detection, treatment and care is available in New Zealand.

Latest News

Boobops - Third Time National Champions

The Boobops Breast Cancer Dragon Boat Team have capped off an amazing season winning their third consecutive National title win at the New Zealand Dragon Boat Association National Championships held at the Blue Lakes Rotorua on Saturday 6th April. The Boobops won gold in the 500 meter premium race bronze in the 200 meter sprint after being impeded from a collison recovered to get bronze the Gold was won by Pink Dragons which was fantastic the team were are very happy for Pink Dragon along time coming. With the 2 kilometer event the results were given out at prize given which Boobops won Gold in posting two personal best times for the 500 and 2000meters. The team also picked up the Breast Cancer Cup and the Rountree Shield again as part of the 500 meter win.

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Show Your Heart for Women Living with Breast Cancer

A huge thanks to everyone who got in behind BCAC's annual fundraiser, Show Your Heart for Women Living with Breast Cancer, which ran between April 22 and May 19.

 

In particular, we'd like to acknowledge the support of Arnott's Tim Tam, Woman's Day magazine and Countdown supermarkets.

 

Arnott's Tim Tam and Woman's Day donated money from every purchase at Countdown supermakets to BCAC.  The money raised will help BCAC produce and distribute our Step by Step support and information pack to the 2,800 New Zealanders newly diagnosed with breast cancer each year. 

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I felt like I was on a freight train, with no way to get off.

St Heliers grandmother, Raewyn Francis, was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2012 and says BCAC’s Step by Step  was her ‘soul mate’ throughout her treatment programme.

Raewyn had had a small lump in her breast since the late ‘80s and was usually good about going for her regular mammograms in order to keep an eye on it.

In 2012, she noted the lump had slightly changed shape.  About the same time she received her yearly reminder for breast screening, but didn’t get around to making an appointment because she was busy and stressed with other things going on in her life.  Then one day, her boss insisted she ‘just make the appointment and go before work ’.  To this day Raewyn will be forever thankful.

Read more

Get regular breast examinations

Angela Tovey has helped more than 50 women through breast cancer diagnosis and treatment in her role as an Auckland GP, but on Christmas Eve last year she was herself confronted with the disease. 

“That was a lovely Christmas present,” she laughs.  “It was a bit grim and I had to wait three weeks before I could have surgery or before I could find out what type of breast cancer I had. It’s a long time to wait when you’ve just been diagnosed with cancer,” she says.

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Stay Positive, Act Positive.

Whetu Pickering was diagnosed with a particularly aggressive form of breast cancer, known as triple negative breast cancer.

She was 40 when she found a lump under her arm and went to get it checked out.  She didn’t believe she could have breast cancer and thought the lump might be related to treatment she’d just finished for Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT).

But investigations revealed that it was breast cancer and Whetu then had a partial mastectomy, chemotherapy and radiation therapy.

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The hardest part was telling my family

Rebecca Hawkins was only 40 when she was diagnosed with breast cancer and says BCAC’s Step by Step support pack helped her to understand and process her diagnosis and treatment.

The mum-to-four-boys was diagnosed after her GP sent her for a mammogram when he found lumps in her breast following a regular breast exam.

The mammogram identified fibroadenoma, which are small benign lumps in the breast.  Her GP sent her to a breast surgeon, who then did a biopsy which revealed a cancerous tumour.

Read more

Mammograms save lives!

Penelope was diagnosed with HER2-Positive breast cancer after a regular mammogram. 

It was only the second mammogram she’d been for, but something untoward was identified and a biopsy revealed that she had breast cancer.  “That mammogram saved my life,” she says.

Penelope had a full mastectomy, chemotherapy, radiation treatment and is currently being treated with Herceptin and tamoxifen.

The 49-year-old’s treatment was complicated by other health issues and she frequently collapsed due to anaemia exhaustion. 

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Mammograms save lives!

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Young women can, and do, get breast cancer

Greer Davis knows a thing or two about cancer.  Her Mum has had breast cancer.  Her Dad died of a brain tumour in 2009.  And at the age of only 25, Greer herself was diagnosed with breast cancer.

The Auckland woman was shell-shocked to discover in 2012 that she had an aggressive form of breast cancer at such a young age. 

“I freaked out.  You just get this knot of fear in your stomach because it’s all so unknown and when they start talking about mastectomies it’s all quite scary,” she says of her diagnosis.

She had sought medical help when she discovered a lump in her breast after several months of tenderness.

Read more

I'm living with cancer, not dying of cancer

Breast cancer has dealt Angela Litterick-Biggs a death sentence.  But the Wellington woman refuses to accept defeat and lives her life with an energy and passion that’s truly extraordinary.

It was Angela Litterick-Biggs’ worst birthday ever.  On the day she turned 41, only a couple of years after her mother died of cancer, Angela was told she had breast cancer. 

A week later she was told that the cancer was incurable. It had spread from her breast to her spine.  Doctors could not cure the cancer.  They could only try to control it. 

Read more

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Upcoming events

BCT webinar - Impact of breast cancer on sex, fertility and pregnancy
28 July, 2026 - 7:30PM

A breast cancer diagnosis can reshape how people think about their bodies, relationships and future plans — including sex, fertility and pregnancy. While these conversations are becoming more visible and better understood, they remain complex, deeply personal, and often filled with unanswered questions. In BCT’s upcoming Q&A, a panel of leading experts and women with a lived experience of… Read more


World Dense Breast Day
30 September, 2026 - 8:00AM

This year 30 September is World Dense Breast Day. Breast density matters as it can mask breast cancer signs in mammograms and it is also associated with a higher risk for breast cancer. You can read more about this here and here… Read more


Metastatic Breast Cancer Awareness Day
13 October, 2026 - 8:00AM

Today is Metastatic Breast Cancer Awareness Day. You can read more about metastatic breast cancer here.


Global Lobular Breast Cancer Awareness Day
15 October, 2026 - 8:00AM

Today is Global Lobular Breast Cancer Awareness Day. You can learn more about this type of breast cancer, which affects 15% of those diagnosed, by clicking here.


International Day Against Breast Cancer
19 October, 2026 - 8:00AM

Today is International Day Against Breast Cancer. You can learn more about breast cancer from our website by clicking here. 


About Us
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About Us

The Breast Cancer Aotearoa Coalition (BCAC) provides a united voice for NZ women who are experiencing breast cancer. We support, inform and represent those with breast cancer so they can make informed choices about their treatment and care. Formed in 2004, BCAC is a registered charity run by breast cancer survivors. If you would like to join us to help improve breast cancer treatment and care in Aotearoa, New Zealand please email us to find out more. 

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