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ABMDR: Hundreds respond to bone marrow donor recruitments

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  • ABMDR: Hundreds respond to bone marrow donor recruitments

    Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry
    3111 Los Feliz Avenue, #206, Los Angeles, CA 90039
    Contact person: Dr. Frieda Jordan
    Phone: (323) 663-3609
    Email:[email protected]

    PRESS RELEASE

    Hundreds respond to bone marrow donor recruitments

    Campaign is held by Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry
    in California and Massachusetts



    Los Angeles, April 14, 2009 - On Palm Sunday (April 5), a major drive

    to recruit bone marrow donors and raise public awareness of the life-
    saving benefits of donorship was held by the Armenian Bone Marrow
    Donor Registry (ABMDR) in California and Massachusetts.

    The recruitments, which took place in Glendale, San Francisco, and
    two venues in Boston, were initiated by the family of Aram, a 24-year-
    old Detroit resident who suffers from acute leukemia and is in urgent
    need of a bone marrow stem cell transplant. In the weeks leading up
    to the recruitment drive, Aram's family and friends made appeals to
    the public and launched a fundraising effort to help offset the cost
    of donor screenings during the recruitments. Over 40 volunteer
    recruiters from the ABMDR, community organizations, and churches,
    including medical professionals, participated in the events. They
    helped educate attendees about the benefits of donorship, conducted
    screenings, and registered potential donors.

    `We're all so very moved by Aram's story,' said Dr. Frieda Jordan,
    president of the ABMDR Board of Directors. `Here's a vibrant young
    man, someone who should be looking forward to a wonderful future. Yet
    his life-threatening illness means that he will possibly not have a
    chance to survive unless he receives a timely transplant from a
    compatible bone marrow stem cell donor.' Dr. Jordan added that
    currently doctors are trying to induce Aram's leukemia into remission
    and stabilize his condition, to be able to perform a transplant once
    a compatible stem cell donor is identified.

    The ABMDR's donor recruitments, which are held throughout the U.S.
    and Armenia, are an ongoing effort to expand a worldwide and
    predominantly Armenian registry of bone marrow stem cell donors. Dr.
    Vergine Madenlian, the ABMDR's outreach and development officer, said
    that since ethnic Armenians have a unique genetic makeup, often their
    only chance of surviving a life-threatening blood-related illness is
    to receive a bone marrow transplant from an Armenian donor.

    During recruitments, ABMDR volunteers register potential donors after
    conducting a quick and simple screening, which involves taking a
    saliva sample with a swab. Registered donors commit to donating their
    bone marrow stem cell if their HLA tissue type matches that of an
    Armenian or non-Armenian patient suffering from a blood-related
    illness and requiring a transplant. Whenever the ABMDR receives a
    request from a patient in need of a bone marrow transplant, it finds
    matches in its own or other registries worldwide, and subsequently
    facilitates the transplantation process.

    During the April 5 recruitments, more than 300 donors were
    registered. Although the recruitments were initiated specifically in
    response to Aram's critical need of a transplant, any number of the
    1,276 patients currently awaiting a match through the ABMDR can
    potentially benefit from the expanded pool of donors.

    The registry's Marilyn Bazarian, who pioneered recruitments in
    Massachusetts beginning in 2004, spoke of her early days as a
    volunteer and the joys of supporting the registry. `I first became
    involved in the ABMDR after seeing a newspaper report,' she said. `I
    did not fit the criteria [for becoming a donor] - I was beyond the
    desired age range and had a medical history. What to do?' Bazarian,

    who is an Irish-American, continued: `My husband is Armenian, my
    children are half Armenian, and you never know when tragedy will
    strike you, your family, or friends, necessitating a bone marrow
    transplant. I felt volunteering for the ABMDR was absolutely the
    right thing to do. So I started organizing recruitments in
    Massachusetts.'

    Bazarian added: `To see the eagerness and concern on the faces of
    those so willing to help people they don't even know is truly
    rewarding. Here they are lined up to help, with no concern for
    themselves. All you had to say was that an Armenian - it didn't
    matter where - needed help. No matter who I contacted regarding
    recruitments or informational sessions, the answer was always yes.
    Newspapers, radio broadcasters, civic groups, clergy they were all
    willing to help a fellow Armenian, however they could.'

    Bazarian's sentiments were echoed by Narreh Ghazarians, an ABMDR
    recruiter who volunteered at one of the Boston-area events on April
    5. `It was truly touching to see so many young men and women, friends
    and total strangers who had heard about Aram's illness, take the time
    to come and get screened,' she said. `Although I have never had the
    pleasure of meeting Aram, the overwhelming response of people from
    every corner of this country shows what an amazing person he truly
    is. Recruitment drives have been scheduled in several states over the
    next few weeks and we hope that we will find a match for Aram soon.'

    Ghazarians added that the assistance of Aram's girlfriend, her
    family, and friends had an instrumental role in the success of the
    Massachusetts recruitments, which resulted in about 130 new potential
    donors.

    Upcoming recruitment drives include events in Arizona (April 19,
    Armenian Apostolic Church of Arizona in Scottsdale), California
    (April 24, during the Genocide-commemoration event at Montebello's
    Armenian Genocide Memorial), New Jersey (April 24, venue to be
    announced), New York (April 26, St. Vartan Cathedral), and Florida
    (May 8, venue to be announced). Recruitments are also planned to take
    place in Yerevan throughout April.

    Recently the ABMDR reached a much-anticipated milestone as it
    launched its Stem Cell Harvesting Center in Yerevan. The project was
    made possible by a number of major corporate and individual
    donations, as well as grassroots support through the registry's first-
    ever telethon, held on April 13 last year. With a total of $850,000
    raised, the ABMDR was able to renovate the Stem Cell Harvesting
    Center site, equip it with state-of-the-art medical machinery, and
    train personnel. Slated to open on April 28, the center is expected
    to receive full accreditation by the European Federation of
    Immunogenetics.

    Commenting on the public's support of the ABMDR's recruitments, Dr.
    Jordan said, `While the response is great, it's also true that
    recruitments get maximum attention only when they're focused on a
    specific patient - that is to say, when a life-threatening illness
    `hits home.' We appeal to our communities throughout the year, urging
    people to get registered, but many ignore our pleas, perhaps
    believing that catastrophic illnesses happen to others, not them. We
    try to get the message across that becoming a registered donor
    amounts to investing in a free health-insurance plan for individuals
    and families alike, especially if they're young.'

    About the Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry: Established in 1999,
    the ABMDR, a nonprofit organization, helps Armenians worldwide
    survive life-threatening blood-related illnesses by recruiting and
    matching donors to those requiring bone marrow stem cell transplants.

    To date, the registry has recruited over 14,000 donors across three
    continents, identified 1,276 patients, found 821 potential matches,
    and facilitated nine bone marrow transplants.


    For more information, call (323) 663-3609 or visit abmdr.am.

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