Woman raises £1m after sister cared for in tiny room
RUHXA woman who raised £1m in 20 years for a hospital's cancer care says it has created a lasting legacy for her sister.
Nic Noble, from Warminster, founded the annual Walk of Life which sees hundreds of walkers take on a marathon or a 10-mile (9.3km) walk.
She spent years fundraising for the Dyson Cancer Centre at the Royal United Hospital (RUH) in Bath in memory of her sister Vanessa Kyte, who died of breast cancer in 2007 after being cared for in "a tiny room".
Noble said: "The cancer centre as it was, was not fit for purpose for the staff and for the patients. Now my heart sings every time I see that cancer centre and that has given me clarity, hope and kept Nessa's name alive."
The annual walk along the along the Kennet and Avon canal is taking place later, and will be Noble's final year participating.
Rhyannon Boyd, associate director of the hospital's charity, said: "Nic's dedication and generosity have been instrumental in helping bring the Dyson Cancer Centre to life, contributing to a significantly improved environment for patients, families and staff facing a cancer diagnosis."
Noble said the 20 years of fundraising have given her something to focus on after losing her sister.
"I now have two wonderful granddaughters, so lots of family commitments, and I work for my daughter as a swimming teacher and that takes a lot of my time," she told BBC Wiltshire.
RUHXDiagnosed with breast cancer in 2000, Noble started fundraising for new cancer facilities with her sister, including starting the Walk of Life fundraising challenge in 2006.
Noble said: "Ness spent an awful lot of time in a tiny room, which only had an air conditioning unit on the ceiling and she looked out on a red brick wall."
Noble promised her sister before she died that she would continue fundraising for the centre, which opened in 2024 and offers oncology, chemotherapy and radiotherapy services, as well as a 22-bed inpatient ward and Macmillan wellbeing hub.
RUHX"I still walk and I'm still fundraising with the local group that I started in Nessa's name," said Noble.
"For people who have lost their loved one, the walk gives them support and also gives them something to do to give back to the RUH and make a difference to other people who are then going through that journey," she added.
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