Skink Chief
ravagekitteh
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As some of you may be aware, I have mentioned previously that I had been diagnosed and had also suffered a relapse in blood cancer. Thankfully this has all cleared up now, and I’m back to living a relatively normal life. However, part of my treatment required a bone marrow transplant, where healthy donor cells are transplanted from a matching person to the patient, replacing their faulty ones and giving them a new lease on life. I was lucky enough to find a match, and had mine in April 2017. However, the problem is in many countries the register for potential donors is opt in, meaning you have to know about it and actively go out of your way to get onto the register. The fact that many of you have likely never heard of this shows the problem with this.
Matches are needed to give people this lifesaving treatment, and the only way that’s going to happen at the moment is people like you go onto the register. The act of doing so is incredibly simple - it literally only requires you filling out a form and swabbing your cheeks! That’s it. No needles, no hospital appointments, nothing. But in exchange for that you’re giving yourself the opportunity to save a life. If you are called upon to donate, the process is practically identical to giving blood, except they give you your blood back afterwards! A small amount of cases need a General Anaesthetic, but it’s an incredibly simple operation and, again, you’ll be saving a life. If you’ve ever donated blood, you already know what it’s like.
If you live in the UK, USA, Germany, Poland or Chile, there is a fantastic charity called DKMS that take your swabs, coordinate donations and raise awareness. Their website, which I’ll post a link to below, contains everything you need to know about it. However, if you are from elsewhere, there are plenty of other organisations that can do the same.
For some patients, this transplant can mean the difference between life and death. If I hadn’t received mine, I might not be around today.
So please, even if just one of you joins the transplant register, it would still mean one more chance for a seriously ill person to have a chance to live. The more you can spread awareness, the more people you can get on board the better, but even if it’s just you swabbing your cheeks and sending them off, this post would still have been worth it.
Thanks you for your time.
Link to DKMS UK site: https://www.dkms.org.uk/en
Link to DKMS USA site: https://www.dkms.org/en
Link to a day in the life of someone awaiting a transplant: https://www.dkms.org.uk/en/day-life-henry
Matches are needed to give people this lifesaving treatment, and the only way that’s going to happen at the moment is people like you go onto the register. The act of doing so is incredibly simple - it literally only requires you filling out a form and swabbing your cheeks! That’s it. No needles, no hospital appointments, nothing. But in exchange for that you’re giving yourself the opportunity to save a life. If you are called upon to donate, the process is practically identical to giving blood, except they give you your blood back afterwards! A small amount of cases need a General Anaesthetic, but it’s an incredibly simple operation and, again, you’ll be saving a life. If you’ve ever donated blood, you already know what it’s like.
If you live in the UK, USA, Germany, Poland or Chile, there is a fantastic charity called DKMS that take your swabs, coordinate donations and raise awareness. Their website, which I’ll post a link to below, contains everything you need to know about it. However, if you are from elsewhere, there are plenty of other organisations that can do the same.
For some patients, this transplant can mean the difference between life and death. If I hadn’t received mine, I might not be around today.
So please, even if just one of you joins the transplant register, it would still mean one more chance for a seriously ill person to have a chance to live. The more you can spread awareness, the more people you can get on board the better, but even if it’s just you swabbing your cheeks and sending them off, this post would still have been worth it.
Thanks you for your time.
Link to DKMS UK site: https://www.dkms.org.uk/en
Link to DKMS USA site: https://www.dkms.org/en
Link to a day in the life of someone awaiting a transplant: https://www.dkms.org.uk/en/day-life-henry