GREAT North Run veteran Steve Irish is taking part again in aid of the Newcastle Hospitals Charity to say thank you for taking care of his partner following her cancer diagnosis.

His partner Becky Sylvester, was diagnosed 12 years ago, when she was just 29 and with two young children.

Thankfully, the treatment she received, including the removal of three quarters of her stomach, was successful and she is now living with Steve and two sons Ollie, 16, and Max, 13, along with Billy the dog, in Burnopfield.

Steve, 52, who has completed the Great North Run 22 times, said: “It’s thanks to the expert care she received at Newcastle Hospitals that Becky is around today.

“It’s incredible she came through it. She’s raising two boys, has her own business. I’m really proud of her and I want to do something to say thanks to the hospital team who saved her life.

“This is a cause that’s close to home for us all. It’s a very powerful motivation to raise money for Newcastle Hospitals Charity to help others going through the same thing Becky did.”

It was during her pregnancy with Max that Becky first realised something was wrong and, when he was five-months-old, she was diagnosed with stomach cancer.

Becky, who runs her own business, Sylvester Properties in Stanley, said: “I was very young when I was diagnosed and this tends to be a cancer that happens to older people. So, I’d say to anyone who feels in anyway ill to seek medical attention. Cancer can happen at any age.

“It changes your life forever. I make sure I live life to the full and will always be grateful to the amazing staff at Newcastle Hospitals.”

Steve, who works as a senior manager at Ubisoft in Newcastle, has previously run the Great North Run to raise money for the Great North Children’s Hospital Foundation, also part of Newcastle Hospitals Charity, to thank them for the treatment his son Marc, now 20, received as a child.

Newcastle Hospitals Charity supports projects that help to improve the health and wellbeing of patients, staff and the wider community through compassionate and innovative healthcare, education and research.

Steve, a qualified British Athletics Coach, holds running club sessions twice a week to support less experienced runners.

He said: “I wanted to start a club to help support people who weren’t necessarily the fastest at running but who wanted to keep at it.

“We all have a good laugh together and it helps us all out the front door, which is always the toughest part of running. I’m really looking forward to more of that camaraderie at the Great North Run. No doubt, it will be emotional with people finally back together again.”

After the event’s cancellation in 2020, this year’s Great North Run promises to be extra special and will include belated 40th anniversary celebrations.

The only way to sign up to the Great North Run 2021 is via a charity place and limited places are available to run for Newcastle Hospitals Charity.

To support Steve and make a donation to his fundraising visit www.justgiving.com/fundraising/steve-irish9.