The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Trainee nurse saves first life before starting

- By Janet Boyle jboyle@sundaypost.com

A teenager who has been accepted to study nursing has saved the life of a dying cancer patient even before starting her university course.

Erin MacKinnon is not due to begin her nursing degree until September but she was called up to give stem cells after registerin­g with the blood cancer charity Anthony Nolan.

Erin, 19, from the remote island of Eriskay in the Outer Hebrides, is the Western Isles’ first stem donor.

“I registered as a potential donor after hearing a talk at school in January 2019 never thinking that I would ever be a match for anyone,” said Erin.

“Then in January, the charity phoned to say I was a match for someone who was desperatel­y ill and they asked if I would be prepared to fly to London to undergo stem cell removal.

“I agreed immediatel­y because without it this cancer patient was unlikely to survive.”

A blood sample was taken by the island’s GP and sent to the charity’s headquarte­rs

in London. Within days Erin was called asking if she could prepare to fly to London, and she travelled south two weeks ago.

Over the next two days she spent eight hours having stem cells taken from her arm. The procedure works by taking out whole blood through donation, spinning it and separating stem cells from red blood cells through centrifuga­l force, and then transfusin­g the red cells back into her body.

“I didn’t feel a thing and just sat reading then watched a film,” said Erin. “All I know about the patient is that he is male, and he lives in the UK. In time, if everything works out well, I hope to meet him.”

 ??  ?? Erin MacKinnon
Erin MacKinnon

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