Debbie Zelman (1967 - 2017)
Founding President 

DEBBIE'S STORY

In April 2008 Debbie Zelman was a forty-year-old mother of three young children, married to a physician, and a practicing attorney with her own firm. Then her life changed dramatically when she learned she had stage IV stomach cancer, her cancer was inoperable and incurable, and she would need chemotherapy for the rest of her life. At the time of her diagnosis, Debbie was told there were very few effective treatment options for advanced stomach cancer because it is not a common cancer in the United States, and her chance of being alive in five years was only 4%. Debbie immediately began to educate herself about this disease and to seek the best available care. She closed her law practice and began the fight of her life. Debbie had a port inserted and began very harsh chemotherapy treatments. She spent months in bed, doctors' offices, hospitals, and getting scans and tests.

As she began to respond to treatment, Debbie decided that she could make a difference in the treatment options for stomach cancer patients by using her education, experience, and contacts in the community. In 2009 Debbie started Debbie's Dream Foundation: Curing Stomach Cancer (DDF) to aggressively and immediately fund research into innovative, progressive, and cutting-edge treatments for stomach cancer to improve the diagnosis and treatment for this disease; to raise awareness about stomach cancer; and to provide information and assistance to stomach cancer patients, families, and caregivers. It is Debbie's Dream that, with increased funding, more treatments for stomach cancer will become available sooner and a cure will be found.

"Life is a gift, and it offers us the privilege, opportunity, and responsibility to give something back by becoming more." - Tony Robbins

DDF Milestones led by Debbie Zelman

  • 29 chapters in the US, Canada and Germany
  • Providing free support to thousands of stomach cancer patients, families and caregivers from all over the world through the Patient Resource Education Program (PREP)
  • Presenting free cancer education symposia and webinars
  • Assembling a world renowned Scientific and Medical Advisory Board
  • Successfully advocated for inclusion of stomach cancer in the $50 million federally funded Department of Defense (DoD) Peer Reviewed Cancer Research Program (PRCRP) as well as increased funding priority with NCI resulting in almost $18 million funded for stomach cancer research
  • Holding the first Stomach Cancer Capitol Hill Briefing
  • Directly funding $850,000 in research grants

A LEADER • AN ADVOCATE • AN INSPIRATION

Debbie turned her personal challenge and the upheaval of her life into a positive force to create a better future for people diagnosed with stomach cancer. She has been the subject of many news stories, TV interviews, and radio interviews. In January 2012 she appeared on the Dr. Oz show in an episode titled "The Cancer That is Eating You Alive: Stomach Cancer."

She was appointed to several committees for clinical trials and as a patient advocate, including for the National Cancer Institute, the American Society of Clinical Oncology, the American Society of Clinical Pathology, the College of American Pathology, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, and many more.

Throughout the years, Debbie has been honored and nominated by many organizations for her humanitarian efforts to rid the world of gastric cancer, for being an outstanding leader and advocate, and a phenomenal woman and mother.

Debbie passed away on December 23, 2017 after nearly a decade of advocacy on behalf of stomach cancer patients, their families, and caregivers worldwide. She is survived by her husband Andrew; her twins, Rachel and Zachary; her daughter Sarah; her parents Madelyn and Dr. Donald Zelman; and her Debbie's Dream Foundation. Through DDF and the countless lives she has touched throughout her journey, Debbie's mission to find a cure for stomach cancer continues.

To read more about Debbie's courageous cancer journey, you can still vist her Caring Bridge blog at http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/debrazelman.