Skip to main content
Home
Click here to request your free "Step By Step" support pack.
Toggle menu
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Our reports
    • Who we are
    • How we help
    • Our history
    • Our submissions and applications
    • Our member groups
    • Our supporters
    • Contact Us
  • About Breast Cancer
    • Detection
    • Diagnosis
    • Treatment
    • Clinical Trials
    • Books and Resources
  • Advanced Breast Cancer
    • Metavivors living life to the max
    • Legacy Videos
    • Treatment
    • Emotional Support
    • Support for Family and Friends
    • Further Support
    • Metavivors NZ
    • Metavivor Videos
    • Metavivors NZ - Action
    • Striving for Better Care
    • COVID-19 vaccination and breast cancer
    • Moana Papa: A secondary breast cancer diagnosis
  • Get Support
    • Support for You
    • Family Support
    • Getting on with Life
    • Support for Everyone
  • News
    • Latest News
    • Research News
    • BCAC press releases
    • Media Coverage
    • News from BCAC's member groups
    • BCAC's E Newsletters
  • Get Involved
    • Make a donation
    • Photo Gallery
    • Show Your Heart
  • Stories and Videos
    • Breast Cancer Foundation NZ webinars
    • Breast Cancer Trials Q and A sessions on video
    • Stories of Breast Cancer
    • Patient Videos
    • Advanced breast cancer - videos and photos
    • Tributes
  • Search

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

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

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

Show Your Heart for Women Living with Breast Cancer

'Show your Heart' was a fundraising campaign BCAC held in 2012. While this campaign is no longer running you can still contribute to BCAC via our donation page. We are very grateful for all donations we receive.

Show your heart for women living with breast cancer by donating to BCAC to help us make life better for New Zealanders with breast cancer and their families.

You can make a contribution by donating to BCAC directly here.

Find out more about the breast cancer survivors supporting BCAC:

Read more

Issues for young women with breast cancer

Around 150 women under the age of 40 will be diagnosed with breast cancer in New Zealand each year and these women face many concerns that their older counterparts do not have to confront.

BCAC committee member Greer Davis understands these issues all too well.  She is one of the 150 - she was diagnosed with breast cancer last year at the age of only 25.

She recently attended the annual conference for young women affected by breast cancer C4YW to hear a range of presenters discuss the issues and concerns that are specific to young women with breast cancer.  This year’s conference was held in Seattle, in the USA and was co-hosted by Living Beyond Breast Cancer (www.lbbc.com) and Young Survival Coalition (www.youngsurvival.org).

Read more

Researchers can now measure the risk of heart damage during radiation therapy for breast cancer

Researchers have for the first time calculated by how much radiation therapy for breast cancer increases the risk of heart disease and the findings can now be used by doctors to help treat patients more appropriately.


The research, by scientists at the University of Oxford and in Scandinavia and published in the New England Journal of Medicine, looked at more than 2,000 women treated with radiation therapy in Denmark and Sweden.


They found that the risk of radiation-related heart disease was real, but that for most women it was small.

Read more

Dealing with life after breast cancer

 

Getting through breast cancer treatment can unleash a whole new set of emotions for many women.


You may be elated at finishing treatment, apprehensive about the lack of contact with medical professionals, scared about a recurrence of the cancer, or fearless about what the future holds.

Read more

Scientists discover genes driving resistance to breast cancer drugs

UK scientists have discovered a number of genes which are responsible for developing resistance to a targeted medicine used in the treatment of HER2-Positive breast cancer. 

The team at the Institute of Cancer Research in London examined a number of genes that were overactive in women with HER2 Positive breast cancer who had developed a resistance to the drug Lapatinib (Tykerb).

Around 20 per cent of breast cancers are HER2 Positive and the targeted medicines Herceptin and Tykerb are most commonly used to treat women with this type of cancer.  However, in some women a drug may stop being effective after being used for a certain period of time.

Read more

BCAC thrilled that more Pasifika women are getting mammograms

BCAC applauds the latest figures from BreastScreen Aotearoa, which show that more Pasifka women are going for regular mammograms than ever before.

Read more

Study shows a rise in advanced breast cancer in young women

A new study shows that there’s been a small, but significant increase in the incidence of advanced breast cancer in young American women aged 25 to 39, without a corresponding increase in older women.

 

Read more

Sweet Louise - Men's group

Something for the men: Men's Group, at dove house


A breast cancer diagnosis has a far-reaching impact, affecting lives on many levels: practical, emotional, physical and spiritual.  Family and friends offer much-needed support but often it is the husband or partner who must pull all the threads together, care for wife or partner and keep children, family, profession and life all moving forward.  This is a group for partners, and grown up male family members.

The group meets at dove house http://ebhospice.org.nz/ at 6pm.  Refreshments provided.


Dates for 2013:Wednesdays 29/5, 31/7, 25/9.

Please confirm attendance by phoning 09 575 4555 or 0800 11 22 77.

Read more

Pagination

  • First page « first
  • Previous page ‹ previous
  • …
  • Page 47
  • Page 48
  • Page 49
  • Page 50
  • Current page 51
  • Page 52
  • Page 53
  • Page 54
  • Page 55
  • …
  • Next page next ›
  • Last page last »

Click here to donate

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
Family Support
Patient Videos

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. 

Connect online

Follow @BCACNZ
sfy39587stp18