
LUNG CANCER CANADA ANNOUNCES NEW PRESIDENT DR. ROSALYN JUERGENS - A BOLD VISION FOR THE FUTURE ROOTED IN CARE, COLLABORATION, AND IMPACT Français
Dr. Juergens succeeds Dr. Stephanie Snow, whose impactful leadership since 2021 helped shape Lung Cancer Canada into a more national, connected, and equity-focused organization. During her tenure, LCC expanded its presence across Canada, deepened engagement in Quebec, and strengthened the voice of lung cancer patients in research, education, and public policy.
"Serving as President of Lung Cancer Canada has been one of the most meaningful chapters of my life," said Dr. Stephanie Snow. "Together, we built new partnerships, expanded our reach, and worked to ensure that no one facing lung cancer is left behind. Rosalyn is the right leader to carry this work forward — a trusted colleague, brilliant clinician, and fierce advocate who will take Lung Cancer Canada to even greater heights."
Dr. Juergens has been part of the Lung Cancer Canada family for over a decade, serving as a trusted clinical advisor and patient advocate. She brings cross-border healthcare experience from both Canada and the U.S. and has seen firsthand how system-level gaps – in screening, biomarker testing, treatment access, and clinical trial availability – affect patient outcomes.
"Lung Cancer Canada has become a powerful voice for change — and now we must stretch even further," said Dr. Rosalyn Juergens. "As President, I'm committed to building on the progress we've made by working in partnership, with patients, caregivers, clinicians, and researchers, to deliver the care, access, and hope every Canadian with lung cancer deserves."
As the only national charity in Canada exclusively dedicated to lung cancer, Lung Cancer Canada remains focused on delivering across its four core pillars: patient support, public awareness, research investment, and advocacy. Under Dr. Juergens' leadership, advocacy will continue to grow — not as a standalone initiative, but as an integrated force across all of LCC's work.
This includes advancing five core priorities:
Increasing survivorship through equitable access to screening
Breaking down barriers to timely biomarker testing
Ensuring faster access to the most effective treatments
Boosting investment in lung cancer research
Expanding access to clinical trials across all regions
"I'm so pleased to welcome Dr. Juergens as our new President," said Shem Singh, Executive Director of Lung Cancer Canada. "This is a reaffirmation of who we are and the mission that drives us. Dr. Juergens brings the urgency, insight, and compassion this moment calls for. I'm excited for what's ahead: a chapter grounded in bold ideas, strong partnerships, and meaningful impact across the lung cancer community."
Dr. Snow will remain an active member of Lung Cancer Canada's Board of Directors and will lead the organization's Fall 2025 National Policy Series, continuing to shape LCC's work in health system equity and patient access.
Each President of Lung Cancer Canada has left a lasting mark — strengthening its voice, expanding its reach, and guiding the organization through transformative growth. With Dr. Juergens at the helm, Lung Cancer Canada enters a new chapter rooted in partnership, progress, and possibility.
A public Q&A with Dr. Juergens will be hosted later this summer, and an upcoming episode of the Lung Cancer Voices podcast will feature a candid conversation between Dr. Juergens, Dr. Snow, and past Presidents Dr. Natasha Leighl and Dr. Paul Wheatley-Price.
About Lung Cancer Canada
Lung Cancer Canada is the only Canadian charity solely dedicated to supporting and advocating for those affected by lung cancer. As the leading national resource, Lung Cancer Canada provides support, trusted education, and strong advocacy to ensure patient voices shape healthcare decisions and treatment access. Lung Cancer Canada also champions research, funding innovation to improve outcomes and advance care. Through these efforts, Lung Cancer Canada empowers the lung cancer community while driving meaningful change. To learn more: www.lungcancercanada.ca

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They said research indicates that looking at both physiological and social conditions is actually the most predictive of heat related risk. 'In the context of seniors, you can think about how things, like living on a fixed income or living alone, compounded that bio-medical risk,' they said. 'We can't think about age, poverty, social isolation or any other risk factor alone. 'We have to think about heat risk as systemic and intersectional, and we need our responses to be similarly multi-faceted so that they can reflect that.' Extreme heat czar Beyond the 619 people killed, the heat dome also eviscerated marine life, with an estimated billion marine animals killed along the Pacific coast. And the heat wave ushered the BC town of Lytton to its fiery end. After record-melting temperatures (49.6C) were recorded in the town, a wildfire soon swept in, reducing it to smouldering ashes. 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For Henderson, that's the key lesson from the heat dome. Extreme heat will happen again. It's just a matter of time. 'These aren't random misfortunes, they are evidence of what scientists have been talking about for decades. The climate is changing,' she said. 'So everything we can do to raise the bar on preparedness for next year and 10 years from now and 30 years from now, is going to pay dividends into the future.' 'One of the key things we don't have in the province right now, which we're seeing in other places, is for lack of a better word, an 'extreme heat czar,'' she said. 'We have lots of people who view this as part of their broader work, but nobody with dedicated responsibility to extreme heat.' The benefit, Henderson says, is that priorities frequently shift based on the priorities of the day. If an individual were empowered to keep extreme heat as their focus, even when other disasters, like flooding or a pandemic, occur, further change to protect lives could be driven. LNG ships Greene said because BC's government recognizes more climate change-driven extreme heat and other disasters will continue to be more common, the province is taking steps. She described an extreme heat emergency alert sent out to people through their phones, radios and televisions with information about how to stay safe; financial support to help communities open cooling centres, updating building codes for new buildings to require temperatures to not exceed certain thresholds; and providing funding for communities to plan for extreme heat through temperature mapping. But she also acknowledged that rising global emissions will mean worsening climate disasters, including droughts, floods, wildfires and landslides. 'So it is important to continue to decarbonize our economy,' she said. As the anniversary of the heat dome passes, British Columbia is witnessing another milestone: the first LNG ships to export natural gas to global markets — setting off the carbon bomb that is the Montney Play — had sailed. 'I know there is more work to do, and it's something that has to happen in tandem with protecting communities, protecting people from the effects of climate change,' Greene said. 'Realistically in the world, we're not going to be turning off fossil fuels tomorrow, there's no switch to turn off, and so this work continues to be important both in growing our clean economy and protecting communities.'