This is Shannon:
She was never able to get a bone marrow match to treat her leukemia. From the article I read I learned that not only is it hard for minorities in general to find a bone marrow match when needed, but it is especially hard for people of mixed race to find a match. Shannon was African-American and Hispanic. There just aren’t a large number of African-American or mixed race bone marrow donors out there.
Bone marrow donations and transplants are something unfamiliar to me so I checked out marrow.org where I found this picture with the caption “Be her leap from hospital room to ballroom” :
Seeing two little African-American girls who want to perform and are plagued so young by a disease shot a pain through my heart. Not that I only care about little Black girls and not anyone else, but my own little cousin went through Hodgkin's lymphoma, and as a Black woman with performance aspirations those two pictures resonated with me.
So after getting myself together (and deciding to post about this) I looked up what goes into a bone marrow donation. I think we’ve all seen that infamous episode of House where Forman sticks a HUGE needle into a screaming little boy to get a bone marrow sample for the boy’s brother. I could see how something like that could be a deterrent to even thinking about being a bone marrow donor. Reading online I was surprised to see that it isn’t as heinous of a procedure as the episode suggested, and as people may think.
First of all. It only takes a mouth swab to see if you are compatible. If you are found as a match, to actually give your marrow you are put under anesthesia and marrow is taken from the bone through a needle, or more commonly, the cells needed are filtered through circulating blood in a procedure similar to donating blood or having a blood test that requires multiple injections the week prior to the procedure.
Hopefully knowing that you don’t have to have a needle stuck into your bone, and if you do, you are put under anesthesia will persuade people to look into how they can contribute as a bone marrow donor, or at least be registered with marrow.org in the event that they are a match to someone in need of a bone marrow to save their lives. If you register with the site they will send you a kit to do a mouth swab and you send it back to them. It’s that easy to be part of the database.
I will be taking the time to read through all the guidelines and information before I make the commitment, and I encourage others to do so as well.
If I am found to be a match down the road, it would take time out of my life, and cause some time of discomfort, but am I selfish enough to not trade a few weeks of time and discomfort on my part for someone else’s life?
I heard about her passing too, it is truly so heartbreaking. She was such a beautiful young girl with a bright future ahead. And I didn't know much about bone marrow donation and transplants either before reading this so thank you!!! Definitely something to think about and consider.
ReplyDeleteThat GOOD GOOD Blog
@Dee O - Glad I could teach you something new! Thanks for coming by.
ReplyDeleteI, too, learned a lot about bone marrow transplants and donations through this blog entry. Although I can't donate due to being on psych meds and being anemic, I will encourage others to do so.
ReplyDeletethis made me so very sad :( what a young beauty....may she rest in peace and I hope that the word gets out that it ISN'T as traumatizing as we saw on house, because until now i thought it was like that too...thanks for the info
ReplyDelete@socialitedreams - thanks for coming by Vonnie. Glad to shed some light on how the process really works!
ReplyDeleteD783D3C889
ReplyDeletebeğeni satın al
En Güvenilir Hisse Senedi Nereden Alınır
Bitlo Güvenilir mi
Fake Numara
Ucuz Takipçi
EE1B7AFDF0
ReplyDeletehacker kirala
hacker kirala
tütün dünyası
-
-