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Balderton’s Andrew Hirst has grade 4 glioblastoma and has thanked the community of Newark and beyond for their fundraising




After receiving good news from his latest scan, a terminally-ill dad of three has thanked the community for coming together to help him and his family.

As previously reported in the Advertiser, Andrew Hirst, 35, from Balderton, has grade 4 glioblastoma with a prognosis of 12 to 18 months, and is aiming to raise £250,000 to undergo pioneering treatment overseas to give him more precious time with his family.

After his diagnosis in November 2024, Andrew then underwent 30 sessions of chemotherapy and 30 sessions of radiotherapy to reduce the tumour, but sadly these treatments will not cure glioblastomas of this nature.

Andrew Hirst rings the bell to signify the end of his cancer treatment.
Andrew Hirst rings the bell to signify the end of his cancer treatment.

He had a new scan at the beginning of the month to see if the treatment has shrunk the tumour — and he received the results on Wednesday (March 12) which showed that the tumour has not grown and no new tumours have emerged, so for now he needs to keep doing what he is doing.

He has hired a hyperbaric oxygen chamber, which delivers oxygen at increased pressure to help boost blood oxygen levels and aid the healing process and has been committed to living a healthy and active lifestyle.

And now he is hoping to raise enough money to access lifesaving immunotherapy treatment abroad that could give him more precious time with his wife Rachael and children Freddie, 10, Juliana, 6, and three-year-old Maximilian, and he said he has been “blown away” by the support from the community.

Andrew Hirst with his wife Rachael and children Freddie (top left), Juliana (right) and Maximilian.
Andrew Hirst with his wife Rachael and children Freddie (top left), Juliana (right) and Maximilian.

Many people have come forward to organise fundraisers to help Andrew reach the £250,000 total, including his cousin Kate Robinson who held an online social media competition to win free music lessons when a donation was made to the cause, and a cake sale and quiz at Tambo Lounge in Newark also raised thousands of pounds.

One upcoming fundraiser is by the Newark Castle Keepers Netball Club who have organised an impressive raffle, with prizes including a six month gym membership at Code Fitness, and Eden Hall Day Spa voucher, a signed training top from Nottingham Forest Netball, beauty, tattoo, and clothes vouchers, and much more.

The raffle will be drawn on Saturday March 29 at Coddington village hall between 4pm and 7pm, with tickets costing £2 a strip or £15 for 10.

The team are also running a fundraising netball tournament to raise money for Andrew’s cause, which is taking place on Sunday March 23 from 9am, and any teams wishing to join in can find out more information via the Facebook event page.

Arcade Mania have launched a competition giving entrants the chance to win one of their arcade machines worth £949 when a donation is made to Andrew’s cause.

Other challenges include a local family taking on a Tough Mudder at Belvoir Castle to raise money for Andrew, and his good friend Jason Pocklington is taking on the LEL — a London to Edinburgh then back to London cycling challenge.

“The kindness of people in the community has really blown me away,” Andrew said, “It’s been overwhelming how people want to help and how much they have been raising.”

So far, more than £84,000 has been raised towards the total to fund Andrew’s treatment. To make a donation, you can do so online at https://gofund.me/0416d92b

Andrew has been continuing to keep busy and stay healthy, and even finished a ParkRun in 28 minutes, as well as completing 20 laps in the pool.

“I’m just trying to keep as healthy as I can, I feel really good at the moment so just trying to keep at it,” he added.



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