Tuesday, December 14, 2010

I Joined The Fight Against Cancer...So Can You




I have always had a soft place in my heart for supporting the fight against cancer, especially childhood cancer. It breaks my heart to know children have to suffer through such sickness and can barely understand why. I have never personally had a family member sick with childhood cancer and I pray that I never do. However, I want to know I did all I can to support those families whose children are sick...you just never know what the future may bring.

This last week I choose to join the National Bone Marrow Registry.... and you can too!

This Christmas, here's two relatively simple, FREE gifts you can give your fellow man:

1. Get registered in the bone marrow donor registry: http://www.marrow.org/JOIN/. There are many people who need a life-saving bone marrow transplant, but who don't have a match. Last month we heard about this sad story - an 11 year old girl with AML (leukemia), who passed away. She needed a bone marrow transplant and a perfect match couldn't be found. YOU could be someones match. It takes about five minutes to get signed up. Get registered and give someone hope! Our friend Rachel was able to find a donor, can you imagine if she was saved because of YOUR marrow? What an amazing gift for everyone involved!

2. Donate blood at your local Red Cross you can also go HERE if you're not sure where that is. You can donate blood or platelets at American Red Cross. A single platelet donation can provide enough platelets for a full therapeutic dose for a patient in need. In fact, some platelet donations yield enough platelets for two or three therapeutic doses. By contrast, it takes about five whole blood donations to produce a single therapeutic dose. Many patients who need platelets are undergoing chemotherapy or organ transplant and have weakened immune systems. A platelet dose from a single donor reduces the patient’s exposure to multiple donors and is therefore preferred by many physicians. During a platelet donation, a small portion of your blood (less than one pint at a time), is drawn from your arm and passed through a sophisticated cell-separating machine. The machine collects the platelets and safely returns the remaining blood components, along with some saline, back to you. After the donation you can resume your normal activities, avoiding heavy lifting or strenuous exercise that day.

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1 comment:

Norman & Trynitee Peat said...

Good job missy, I joined about 6 months ago. Who knows if we will ever be called upon but either way at least we are willing to help. I wish more people would too.