Children’s Melanoma Prevention Foundation acquired by national organization that will continue its mission

The Children’s Melanoma Prevention Foundation (CMPF) joined forces this summer with the National Park Service’s Boston Harbor Islands, the Department of Conservation and Recreation and Boston Harbor Now to educate staff, visitors and campers about proper sun protection and skin cancer prevention.  Passing out complimentary sunscreen, courtesy of Neutrogena, on Spectacle Island in Boston Harbor are (left to right): Tori DeMaio of Plymouth; Erin Presutti of Bridgewater; Dr. Richard F. Eisen of Hingham; and CMPF Executive Director, Maryellen Maguire-Eisen, also of Hingham. Photo by Scott Eisen.

February 16, 2022 By Carol Britton Meyer

The Norwell-based Children’s Melanoma Prevention Foundation and its award-winning SunAWARE for Life education program were recently acquired by the Melanoma Research Foundation.

CMPF started as a non-profit educational foundation in 2003 to educate children and the people who care for them about sun protection and skin cancer prevention and to advocate for laws that protect children from developing skin cancer, and that mission will continue under the MRF umbrella, according to Founder and Executive Director Maryellen Maguire-Eisen RN, MSN, who recently retired. She and her husband, Dr. Richard Eisen -- a respected dermatologist and surgeon, now retired --are longtime Hingham residents.

Maryellen Maguire Eisen, Photo courtesy of CMPF

Headquartered in Washington, DC, MRF is the largest independent organization devoted to melanoma. During this transition, CMPF was dissolved and the Norwell headquarters closed, with MRF acquiring all of CMPF’s educational programs, publications, intellectual property, and assets.

Maguire-Eisen is working with MRF to ensure it has the necessary tools and knowledge to carry the program forward. "It is abundantly clear that their culture, work ethic, and commitment to preventing melanoma is perfectly aligned with CMPF's," she told the Hingham Anchor. "Our board did some soul-searching and decided that to really make a difference and to achieve our mission, we needed to find a larger, national organization that was willing to utilize and expand upon what we offered. MRF was excited when we reached out to them and promised that they would continue to implement our program. CMPF board members are excited about this opportunity."

CMPF Board Chair Sara Ader; MRF Education Officer Amy Marbaugh, RN, BSN, MS; and CMPF Founder and Executive Director, Maryellen Maguire-Eisen RN, MSN. Since being founded by Maguire-Eisen in 2003, CMPF has educated more than 1 million children in schools and throughout the community. Photo by R.J. Donovan.

Hingham resident Sara Mason Ader, who served as chair of the CMPF board, explained that during the pandemic, it was difficult to raise funds in the usual way, and with the changed environment, CMPF was not able to go into classrooms. "As a result, we segued into making videos, which were popular with schools and which MRF will continue to use," she said.

Maguire-Eisen, an oncology and dermatology nurse with more than 40 years of experience, is an Adjunct Clinical Instructor at Boston University, an American Cancer Society Scholar,  and the winner of multiple service and research awards.

She has written extensively on skin cancer prevention and has lectured internationally on sun protection and skin cancer prevention, with a special focus on children.

For years following her mother's diagnosis of melanoma in 1977 and her recovery from subsequent surgery, Maguire-Eisen wanted to do something to give back to others in return for her mother's healthy outcome.

"I eventually realized that the best thing I could do to prevent the consequences of melanoma would be to teach children about sun protection," she explained.  The outcome was the creation of CMPF, which is dedicated to “preventing skin cancer—one child at a time.”

Over the years, Maguire-Eisen and CMPF volunteers would often run into teachers and kids in the community who had participated in the SunAWARE program years before "and they would tell us what a difference it made in their lives," Maguire-Eisen said. "Others would write thank-you notes telling us what they learned."

Over the years, CMPF representatives presented the SunAWARE program to more than 100,000 children and their parents and caregivers in local classrooms, sailing centers, and at community events to spread the Foundation's message that melanoma can be prevented.

Classroom visit at Foster Elementary in Hingham, Photo by Scott Eisen.

"We started off educating children about the importance of early detection and prevention and brought a program to the schools that was informative and also fun," Maguire-Eisen said. "We didn't want to make the sun the enemy but rather to teach children how to protect themselves and not get sunburned."

The initial program was so well-received that it continued to grow. As a result, CMPF also partnered successfully with local and national organizations as well as public health experts in Massachusetts to advocate for an indoor tanning ban for minors signed into law by Gov. Charlie Baker in 2016 and also worked closely with South Shore Medical Center to educate new parents about infant sun safety.

CMPF also partnered with the National Park Services, Boston Harbor Islands, and Boston Harbor Now to educate visitors, residents, and Island staff about the importance of proper sun protection, among other accomplishments.

Maryellen Maguire-Eisen (fourth from right), Executive Director of The Children's Melanoma Prevention Foundation (CMPF), leads a team of staff and volunteers in distributing free sunscreen at the Boston Harbor Islands Visitors’ Center along Boston’s Greenway. Continuing its mission of eradicating melanoma in our community, the Children’s Melanoma Prevention Foundation (CMPF) once again partnered with the Boston Harbor Islands National and State Park, with the National Park Service, Department of Conservation and Recreation, and Boston Harbor Now. Photo by Scott Eisen.

When the program started in 2003,  there was almost no treatment for melanoma," according to Maguire-Eisen. "Today there are new treatments that make a difference, and people who have survived melanoma are very concerned that their children and grandchildren don't experience what they did."

Maguire-Eisen explained why this effort is so important to her. "Skin cancer is the number one cancer in the United States and it's very preventable," she said. "I really wanted to make a difference, especially in the area of prevention."

(Left to right) Dr. Richard Eisen, South Shore Skin Center and CMPF Board Member Maryellen Maguire-Eisen, Exec. Director, CMPF; State Rep. Kate Hogan; Maura Flynn, RN, CMPF SunAWARE Educator & Advocacy Coordinator; Erin Presutti, CMPF Asst. Executive Director; Sara Mason Ader, CMPF Board Chair; Janet McNulty, Hingham Institution for Savings. Photo by Alena Kuzub.

She noted that ultraviolet radiation from the sun is stronger in April and May than it is in August. "You can get a sunburn on a 50-degree day in May," she said.

Most sun damage occurs early in life, "so we wanted children and their caregivers to realize that they can have fun outside without [experiencing] sun damage," Ader explained.

"Hopefully learning good habits at an early age will carry through life and avoid a lot of heartache later on."

Ader noted that New England's skin cancer rates are among the highest in the country because in places that experience warm weather year-round, people are more aware that they need to wear sunscreen and take precautions. "Children can get a sunburn in April on the soccer field," she said.

The Children's Melanoma Prevention Foundation (CMPF) recently presented a combined Spa Day Fundraiser and Artisan Craft Show at South Shore Skin Center in Norwell. Welcoming guests were: CMPF Founder and Executive Director, Maryellen Maguire-Eisen RN, MSN; CMPF Board Member, Lori Skinner, RN, BSN; and Dr. Richard Eisen, CMPF Board Member and partner at South Shore Skin Center. Photo by R. J. Donovan.

Ader is hopeful that in continuing CMFP's mission, the MRF will reach not only children and their caregivers in Massachusetts, but also "millions of children across the country and [positively] affect their lives."

During her retirement, Maguire-Eisen is looking forward to golfing more with her friends, spending more time with family and friends who live around the country, traveling, and continuing to be involved with the MRF.

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.