Connecting cycling with a cause - Director of Allied Health, The Prince Charles Hospital

My name is Perry Judd and I’m the Director or Allied Health at The Prince Charle’s Hospital in Brisbane. 

You may not realise it, but The Prince Charles Hospital is home to Queensland’s second busiest Paediatric Emergency Department.

There are thousands of children and their parents who seek help at this North Brisbane Hospital during their most vulnerable moments each year and are cared for by our teams.

We’ve had a huge growth in presentations to the Children’s Emergency. 10 years ago, we were seeing just over 20,000 presentations per year and over the last 12 months, we’ve now seen close to 37,000 presentations.

I know firsthand the needs of our hospital to support sick and injured kids, which is why this year, I’m participating in my first ever Chain Reaction event to raise money for The Common Good through The Prince Charles Hospital Foundation.

I’m excited to have the opportunity to do something that I love in cycling and at the same time enable the purchase of new equipment that can be used to treat kids who come to us for care.  

Specifically, we hope to raise funds to support the purchase of a paediatric ultrasound machine, a critical piece of equipment that is heavily used in the diagnosis and care of kids who present to The Prince Charles Hospital.

 I'd appreciate any support you can give. 

My Activity Tracking

2,933
kms

My target 1000kms

My Updates

How a bone marrow transplant saved my life and has kept me back in the saddle

In January 2013, Perry was diagnosed with Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) – a cancer of the bone marrow and blood. At the time, the father-of-two, then 37, had a 1-year-old daughter and a 6-year-old son.

“I went through the grieving process where first I was angry, then I denied it, believing it’s not happening to me, and then I went through the bargaining phase pleading with whatever high powers up there to let me live. I didn’t want to leave my family behind. I had to have those serious discussions with my brother about looking after my family if I didn’t make it.” Perry recalled.

Just before receiving this confronting diagnosis, Perry spent a year in Europe working as a physio with an Eastern European national cycling team, and competing in UCI masters events.

“I’d never been fitter in my life. But at the same time, I realised that at the end of that year, when I was getting tired and demotivated, I was probably sicker than I knew. And that was the start of it,” he recalled.

“When I was training for cycling, I was very fatigued, unable to get my heart rate up, and I felt like I was drained of energy. If I was pushing myself too hard, I felt like I was going to faint. So, I caught onto something being wrong quite early because I was noticing all these effects in training.” 

Perry’s initial prognosis wasn’t good.

“Basically, if I didn’t get a full match for a bone marrow transplant, the statistics weren’t really in my favour,” he recalled.  

“But a series of events ended up clicking. My brother was found to be a full match for a donor, and there was only about a 25% chance that that would be the case.”

While this was incredibly fortunate for Perry, he says preparing his body for that bone marrow transplant took an “absolute toll” on him mentally and physically.

“I had five rounds of chemotherapy and several days of full body radiation to wipe out all of my stem cells.  I wasn’t in a good place for quite a long time, and I just had to get to that endpoint where I was ready to receive the donor cells,” he recalled.

Receiving a transplant is an absolute gift, however, there is still a period post-transplantation where the body must adapt and recover first.

“You’re not over the hump when you get that transplant. Then you’ve got to wait for your blood counts to come back and then have more biopsies and hope that the new DNA has taken, and your body is accepting it and producing more blood cells and that they’re differentiating how they’re supposed to,” Perry said.

“Once you’ve had the transplant, you might also have to battle graft-versus-host-disease (GVHT) – where your body still recognises that there’s something foreign there, and it fights it. It can cause all sorts of other problems. Graft-versus-host-disease is one of the big contributors to poor outcomes and quality of life post-transplant.”

Following his transplant, Perry had a mild form of acute GVHD and went on a clinical drug trial for that condition. Clinical trials are an important way to look at new ways to prevent, detect, or treat diseases and are a crucial step in the research process.

“You can’t do that research without the support of funding bodies and grants, and it can be life-changing,” Perry said.

Since his bone marrow transplant, Perry has celebrated some remarkable milestones in his health recovery and personal and professional life.

He says the first milestone was reaching 100 days post-transplant, the second was the 1-year mark, and the third was when 5-years ticked by.

This May, Perry will celebrate eleven years post-transplant.

“In ten years, I’ve gone from being very, very unwell, staring my mortality in the face, to being the Director of Allied Health at The Prince Charles Hospital. It’s been a pretty amazing journey.”

And while he acknowledges that it was touch and go for a while, he is incredibly grateful for the care he received and eventually realised he could have a healthy, happy, rich, and fulfilling life again.

Although, it wasn’t an easy feat to get back on his bike.

“I went through a period where I didn’t like cycling because I was traumatised by the memory of how good it felt when I was fit, and then getting on the bike and being puffed in 100 metres just put me off completely,’ he said.

Perry had great friends who supported him during this journey and encouraged him to take it easy. It took five years until he could pedal 100 kilometres in one go. He was determined to keep improving and eventually he cycled 1000 kilometres around Tasmania in 7 days.

“I had the most fantastic time, and I felt great. Every day I felt stronger and stronger, and I knew I could get fit again and stay fit again,” he said.

Last year, Perry competed in the Tour de Brisbane cycling event in Brisbane, and in 2024 will participate in his first Chain Reaction ride with the goal of raising funds to support the purchase of a paediatric ultrasound machine to support The Prince Charles Hospital, home to the second busiest Children’s Emergency Department. 

Thank You To My Donors

Mosaic

$1,000

Katrina Campbell

What a legend. Leading from the front and providing a legacy. All the best for the week of riding Perry.

$261.25

The Prince Charles Hospital Foundation

Money raised by The Prince Charles Hospital Foundation

$218

Tami Photinos

You'll do TPCH proud along with all our children that we serve. Well done Perry- you are a great ambassador

$158.25

Norm Sinclair

Great cause Perry. Enjoy the ride I am sure it will be hard but fun!!!

$105.50

Steve

Thanks for embarking on this journey to help sick kids Perry. It means a lot to have Hospital Executives leading from the front. Here’s cheers to The Common Good Limitless team.

$105.50

Katrina Avery

Great work Perry - what a fabulous ride for a fabulous cause!

$105.50

Tricia Rolls

Hope it goes well Perry!!

$105.50

Tania

Great work! Well done in such an effort supporting these services.

$105.50

Krystal Blaney

Great work Mr Judd! Good luck!

$100

Aaron Lamont

Keep up the great work Perry

$100

Amber Jones

Good on you Perry! Looks like a great ride, and a fantastic opportunity to raise funds for our youngest patients.

$100

Tracey Brighton

Well done Perry, enjoy the ride!

$52.75

Sharyn Trappett

Thanks for representing Perry.

$52.75

Carolyn

Awesome cause, well done!

$52.75

Kerry And Willow

Well dine Perry. A great effort for a good cause

$52.75

Ali Mahoney

Best of luck Perry!! .I'll be there in spirit on the zwift or in spin :)

$52.75

Craig Knowles

$52.75

Katie Tully

$52.75

Jane Hancock

Wishing you all the best Perry. We need to focus more resources and support this vulnerable part of our patient population - great initiative.

$51.88

Bart Rienties

What an amazing challenge you are doing Perry... I am sure you will do amazingly well :-)

$25.94

Michelle Byard

$21.10

Anita Demchenko

Great work, Perry. What a fabulous ride for a fantastic cause!

$20

Kea Hill-johnson

Amazing work Perry!

$10.55

Jojo Thies

Good cause!

$5.40

Lynelle L Ferguson

I wish you every success in this worthwhile endeavour.

$5.28