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Funky Nurse: Online Game Supports Teen Cancer Patients

TechGuy

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Miniclip and Teenage Cancer Trust have designed a game that turns a difficult subject into a fun and fresh experience.
The game, called “Funky Nurse,” is short but surprisingly hard to win. The player takes on the role of nurse in a cancer care unit and must manage patients’ happiness by bringing them to entertainment rooms, keeping them fed and providing medical care while scrounging for hospital upgrades. The game was developed with input from three former teen cancer patients.
Eye-opening stats on teenagers with cancer in the UK are displayed at the end of every level. “Every day in the UK, six young people aged 13 to 24 are told they have cancer,” reveals one. “That’s about 2,100 a year.” Another points out that one in 312 males and one in 361 females will get cancer before they are 20. You can also learn more about Teenage Cancer Trust, upgrade your ward or proceed to the next level.
Teenage Cancer Trust is a charity aimed at caring for youths with cancer. The charity says most teens diagnosed with cancer are placed in kids’ wards or in elderly wards, leaving them isolated. Teenage Cancer Trust builds special wards in hospitals to provide a friendly, effective area for teens to get better together.


Funky Nurse promotes the charity to more than 65 million monthly players on gaming site Miniclip.
Miniclip has supported the charity since 2009, including free online advertising and fundraising events. Teenage Cancer Trust has 17 units in the UK with another 16 planned for the near future. The organization helps young people fight cancer by also funding clinical and research staff, an education program for schools, family support networks and an annual conference for patients.
What do you think of supporting a charity through a video game? And how far did you get?



Image courtesy of Flickr, Ken-ichi
More About: gamification, gaming, social good, social media, video gameFor more Social Good coverage:Follow Mashable Social Good on TwitterBecome a Fan on FacebookSubscribe to the Social Good channelDownload our free apps for Android, Mac, iPhone and iPad





Posted on Wed, 17 Aug 2011 01:24:22 +0000 at http://feeds.mashable.com/~r/Mashable/~3/8NBQMm6OepE/
Comments: http://mashable.com/2011/08/16/miniclip-cancer-charity-game/#comments
 

TechGuy

Active Member
Reputation
0
Miniclip and Teenage Cancer Trust have designed a game that turns a difficult subject into a fun and fresh experience.
The game, called “Funky Nurse,” is short but surprisingly hard to win. The player takes on the role of nurse in a cancer care unit and must manage patients’ happiness by bringing them to entertainment rooms, keeping them fed and providing medical care while scrounging for hospital upgrades. The game was developed with input from three former teen cancer patients.
Eye-opening stats on teenagers with cancer in the UK are displayed at the end of every level. “Every day in the UK, six young people aged 13 to 24 are told they have cancer,” reveals one. “That’s about 2,100 a year.” Another points out that one in 312 males and one in 361 females will get cancer before they are 20. You can also learn more about Teenage Cancer Trust, upgrade your ward or proceed to the next level.
Teenage Cancer Trust is a charity aimed at caring for youths with cancer. The charity says most teens diagnosed with cancer are placed in kids’ wards or in elderly wards, leaving them isolated. Teenage Cancer Trust builds special wards in hospitals to provide a friendly, effective area for teens to get better together.


Funky Nurse promotes the charity to more than 65 million monthly players on gaming site Miniclip.
Miniclip has supported the charity since 2009, including free online advertising and fundraising events. Teenage Cancer Trust has 17 units in the UK with another 16 planned for the near future. The organization helps young people fight cancer by also funding clinical and research staff, an education program for schools, family support networks and an annual conference for patients.
What do you think of supporting a charity through a video game? And how far did you get?



Image courtesy of Flickr, Ken-ichi
More About: gamification, gaming, social good, social media, video gameFor more Social Good coverage:Follow Mashable Social Good on TwitterBecome a Fan on FacebookSubscribe to the Social Good channelDownload our free apps for Android, Mac, iPhone and iPad





Posted on Wed, 17 Aug 2011 01:24:22 +0000 at http://feeds.mashable.com/~r/Mashable/~3/8NBQMm6OepE/
Comments: http://mashable.com/2011/08/16/miniclip-cancer-charity-game/#comments
 
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