Driven to fight cancer
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With the idea that most men like cars and car shows, Debbie Baker
founded the Cruisin’ for a Cure car show six years ago as a way to
raise awareness about prostate cancer.
The Lake Forest resident’s prostate cancer mission is personal --
her husband was diagnosed with the disease and has been fighting it
for 10 years. Baker said it is her goal that no man and no family
should go through what she and her husband have endured.
The sixth annual Cruisin’ for a Cure car show is scheduled for 7
a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday at the Orange County Fairgrounds. Two
physicians and 15 phlebotomists will be on hand to perform free,
10-minute prostate cancer screenings. All the funds raised will go to
UCLA’s Jonsson Cancer Research Center.
Baker said this year’s fundraising goal is $300,000, which will be
raised through entry fees, admission fees, opportunity drawings and
donations. “PSA Beanie Bears” -- a beanie toy adorned with a blue
ribbon, designed especially for Prostate Cancer Awareness Month --
will be on sale for $10.
Baker said she started the car show because there are many
discussions about breast cancer but few about prostate cancer.
“I’m just trying to make the difference to save the guys,” Baker
said.
She was instrumental in the recent passing of a U.S. Senate
resolution that proclaimed September as National Prostate Cancer
Awareness Month.
Laguna Niguel resident Carson Lev credits Baker with saving his
life and his livelihood. Lev was diagnosed with prostate cancer after
being tested at the car show three years ago.
“I call her my guardian angel -- she really is, and I mean that in
all senses,” Lev said.
He said he had been attending the Cruisin’ for a Cure shows
because he loves cars. Every year, Baker would bug him to get tested.
“My attitude before was like every other guy -- ‘Leave me alone.
I’m young, I’m healthy, I don’t have anything to worry about,’” Lev
said.
The third year, Baker dragged him over to have his blood tested.
Sure enough, he got a note two weeks later, informing him follow-up
tests were necessary.
Baker said of 805 men tested at last year’s event, 81 came back
with results that indicated they should be tested further. Since the
event began, 187 men have been diagnosed with prostate cancer through
the testing.
As with other types of cancer, early detection is key in treating
prostate cancer, Baker said.
Lev said his doctors told him that it could have been 10 years
before he would have ever had any symptoms of the disease.
“I’m like the poster child for early detection,” Lev said. “My
wife still smiles at me when I walk down the hallway.”
He added that it’s important for healthy men in their 30s to get a
blood test to establish a baseline so they can track their
prostate-specific antigen levels, the primary indicator of the
cancer’s presence.
Lev and many other prostate cancer survivors will be at the car
show -- wearing powder blue survivor shirts -- to answer any
questions attendees may have about the disease and to share their
experiences.
The event will feature more than 3,000 classic cars, hot rods and
modern automobiles on parade and on display, and 180 vendors
displaying and selling merchandise.
IF YOU GO
* WHAT: Cruisin’ for a Cure car show and free prostate cancer
screenings
* WHEN: 7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday
* WHERE: Orange County Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa
* COST: $10; $8 for seniors and military; children under 12 get in
free -- all proceeds go to UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
* INFO: (714) 803-9216 or o7www.cruisinforacure.comf7
* LINDSAY SANDHAM is the news assistant. She can be reached at
(714) 966-4625 or [email protected].
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