The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Family collects blood donation pledges in dad’s memory

- JOHN MCPHEE jmcphee@herald.ca @Halijohnmc­phee

Bruce Phinney loved Christmas, helping friends out and volunteeri­ng his time in support of causes such as his beloved Acadia University.

So it's in keeping with that spirit of generosity, particular­ly during this festive season, that his wife Gretchen and daughter Evan have organized a blood donor drive in his memory.

Bruce died on Christmas Day last year not long after undergoing a stem cell transplant to combat a rare type of blood cancer called myelofibro­sis.

“They kill your whole immune system, they take it out and then they give you the stem cells,” Gretchen explained in a recent teleconfer­ence call from Halifax with Evan, who lives in Washington, D.C.

“And shortly after that — before the stem cells were able to replenish or grow — he ended up with an infection and then it went downhill from there."

RARE BLOOD CANCER

Bruce was diagnosed with myelofibro­sis the previous April after he started experienci­ng fatigue and leg cramps.

“He was a man who was hard to slow down and he just attributed it to age - he had just turned 60,” Gretchen said. “He was a busy guy, he ran a bunch of businesses. ... It came on very quickly. There was a really astute pharmacist who said you really should go get some blood tests and then from there he was sent to hematology and they diagnosed it.”

Before the stem cell transplant, he had received more than 80 blood transfusio­ns as part of his treatment on the oncology floor of the Victoria General Hospital.

As the anniversar­y of his death approached, Gretchen and Evan came up with the idea of collecting blooddonat­ion pledges in his memory.

“It was very imperative for his health just because it gave him the energy to get out of bed in the morning rather than do anything else,” Evan said.

EYE-OPENING EXPERIENCE

It was the first time anyone in the family had needed transfusio­ns and it was an eye-opening experience, Evan said. Sometimes her father had to wait hours after his transfusio­n appointmen­t time because there was simply not enough blood to go around.

“One day there was almost a sixhour delay,” Gretchen recounted. “There was definitely a draw on the

blood bank that day - I don't know if it was an accident or a huge surgery — and it was very stressful when he didn't get that.”

After Bruce died, the family started hearing from people they didn't even know about how important he was in their lives.

“There's so many people who said, oh he was my best friend and I just never knew that,” Gretchen said. “It's been, I don't want to say easy, but that angle has helped motivate us to get people to donate blood.”

LOVE OF ACADIA

Although he was an active businessma­n - he owned several companies including Scotia Plastics — he always found time to contribute to his community, Evan said.

“Obviously his businesses were his work and his employment but also there was always a way he was looking to give back, either to his employees or to the community. He volunteere­d for so many things.”

He was particular­ly active in the Acadia community, as a member

of the board of governors and the alumni associatio­n, and as a coach and organizer in the university's swim program.

He graduated in 1981 with a bachelor of business administra­tion.

“It is impossible to adequately articulate Bruce's love for Acadia. He would move mountains for his alma mater,” the Acadia Alumni Associatio­n said on its Facebook page upon his death.

CHRISTMAS WITHOUT BRUCE

Many of his fellow alumni and other friends from Canada and abroad have joined in supporting Gretchen and Evan in their blood donor drive as part of Canadian Blood Service's Partners for Life campaign. They initially set a goal of recruiting 80 donors - to match the number of blood donations Bruce received - but as of Thursday morning, there were 154 under their campaign with the social media hashtag #INME279132.

People can sign up as a blood donor or as a stem cell donor on the blood.ca website. Evan noted that if

you can't donate for medical or other reasons, you can always make a monetary donation or support a friend or relative who gives blood.

In a news release, Canadian Blood Services said more than 500 donors in Nova Scotia are needed to help fill open appointmen­ts by Dec. 31.

Although Gretchen and Evan have had some difficult days in the past year — particular­ly as the Christmas Day anniversar­y of Bruce's death approaches — they're planning on the kind of festive Christmas Day celebratio­n that he so enjoyed.

Evan, who works as an events and sponsorshi­p specialist with the Washington Internatio­nal Horse Show, will be home for a self-isolating Christmas break. She and her mom will be joined by the son of Bruce's best friend (who is from Bermuda and can't get home because of COVID restrictio­ns) and other family members.

“He loved cooking and he loved Christmas dinner. He wouldn't want us to just sit around and not do anything,” Evan said.

 ??  ?? Evan, Gretchen and Bruce Phinney are shown last year in Halifax. Evan and Gretchen are collecting blood donation pledges to honour Bruce's memory. He died on Christmas Day in 2019.
Evan, Gretchen and Bruce Phinney are shown last year in Halifax. Evan and Gretchen are collecting blood donation pledges to honour Bruce's memory. He died on Christmas Day in 2019.

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