Teenage honours recipient urges peers to get involved in ‘rewarding’ charity
Mikayla Beames, 18, has been awarded a British Empire Medal after founding Team Mikayla following her cancer diagnosis aged four.
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One of the youngest people on the New Year Honours list has urged others her age to get involved in “rewarding” charitable causes.
Mikayla Beames, 18, has been awarded a British Empire Medal (BEM) after founding Team Mikayla following her cancer diagnosis aged four.
The charity grants the wishes of children suffering from cancer and has raised more than £300,000 to do so.
Ms Beames, from Wantage, Oxfordshire, told the PA news agency: “It’s mad (to be one of the youngest recipients) it doesn’t seem real, it’s absolutely amazing.”
![Mikayla Beames (centre) alongside her parents Natasha and Ian](http://content.assets.pressassociation.io/2024/12/30190829/60cfe157-bea0-4f83-9b7c-323a3aa089a4.jpg)
Ms Beames recollected making a young boy a “knight for the day” by sending him to Warwick Castle, saying it was “amazing” to see the pictures of him.
“My mum actually read it out to me … I couldn’t believe it.
“It’s the whole world, you don’t expect to be recognised with such a big award.”
Since 2014, Team Mikayla has granted 220 wishes to children who are fighting cancer, distributing more than 1,000 Christmas presents.