Sunday World (South Africa)

Doctor calls on black South Africans to donate

Bone marrow and stem cell donors tend to be white

- By Somaya Stockenstr­oom

Bone marrow donations from black people and coloureds are few, while the majority of patients who need them are from these race groups.

According to Dr Candice Hendricks, most bone marrow and stem cell donors are white, but most patients are black or of mixed race in South Africa.

She said it was important to educate and motivate black South Africans and those of mixed race to register and donate to help the thousands of children who are diagnosed and sometimes die because of blood cancer.

Relating her story, Hendricks, who is 37 and originally from Durban, said her innate passion had always been to help people and look after children, therefore she became a doctor.

But she felt helpless eightand-a-half years ago when her younger brother almost died.

After seeing her younger brother diagnosed and suffering through leukaemia, Hendricks changed her focus to paediatric haematolog­y, focusing on blood disorders, particular­ly in children.

“I was in my second year of training when he became suddenly ill … But we were of the lucky few as my sister was a donor and he recovered after he was transplant­ed.

But it’s a long road of recovery, even as an adult, you have to get all your childhood vaccinatio­ns again.”

She said donations also came from family and siblings, but that sometimes these were not a match and therefore they looked to other donations, which was very low.

“Cancers among children remain rare, but it is a devastatin­g reality. I have personally had to deal with a patient’s loss and there are very few things that are more devastatin­g.”

Last year, she joined the Institute for Cellular and Molecular Medicine at the University of Pretoria as part of the haematopoi­etic stem cell research team.

Her goal, she said, was to increase the availabili­ty of stem cell treatments by establishi­ng a public umbilical cord stem cell bank. “It is my hope that a public umbilical cord blood bank be initiated in South Africa, therefore allowing more children access to life-saving transplant­s. Also, to educate that children a few months old can become ill and die if such blood diseases are not caught early.”

And because children can’t put their pain into words, Hendricks said parents should look out for the following symptoms:

“Paleness, unexplaine­d fatigue, limping because pain starts in the bone. Cancer starts here and spills into the blood stream.”

 ??  ?? Kyra Ramdin was diagnosed with lymphoblas­tic leukemia.
Kyra Ramdin was diagnosed with lymphoblas­tic leukemia.

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