Bone Marrow Registry Drive:

March 8: Great Bend, 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. at Central Kansas Medical Center (St. Dominic Room); For information, call Elizabeth Amman, (620) 786-6404.

March 9: Ulysses, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at Mary Queen of Peace Church. For information, call (620) 356-1532.

March 15: Dodge City, 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Guadalupe. For information, call Karla Schubert (620) 255-3014 or (620) 865-4444.

 

Father Schawe organizes first regional bone marrow drive

By David Myers

Southwest Kansas Register

   In 1999, Ensign resident Karla Schubert was thrust face to face with one of her worst nightmares: while only in the fourth grade, her son, Brett, was diagnosed with Leukemia.

“It’s a huge shock, one of those things that happens to someone else,” she said.

After 10 years of hopes, heartache, and much prayer, her son’s illness is in remission and she has suddenly found herself in the position to save the lives of others who may be facing the same or similar diseases. In fact, every person in the diocese between the ages of 18 and 60 are in the position to save lives.

Father Wesley Schawe, newly appointed pastor of St. Dominic Parish in Garden City and a vocal proponent of adult stem-cell research, has organized a local Bone Marrow Registry Drive that will take place at three parishes in the coming weeks.

For those who wish to be placed on the national registry, all it takes is showing up, signing a waver, taking a swab to the cheek, and then paying a fee to cover lab work.

Father Schawe understands that the fee involved might dissuade possible donors. The cost covers lab work – funding that otherwise couldn’t be met. While donors are usually asked to pay $50 to cover the necessary lab work, a community grant has reduced that cost within the Diocese of Dodge City in half -- to $25 per person.

“It’s an act of service to others,” Father Schawe said. “I’m pretty confident that if a prospective donor has trouble coming up with the fee, between a sponsor or a foundation, a way will be found.” It’s also a way to answer the call to Christian giving and sacrifice, particularly during Lent.

“It’s an honor to be on the list,” said Schubert, who watched her great uncle and father battle cancer, and whose mother is currently battling the disease. Schubert is also one of three organizers Father Schawe asked to coordinate the local drives -- in Great Bend March 8, Ulysses March 9, and Dodge City March 15.

Bone marrow transplants are used to treat several diseases of the blood and immune systems. More than 30,000 people each year are diagnosed with diseases that require bone marrow transplantation. Of these, only 30 percent will find a match within their family. All the rest – nearly 20,000 people annually – will have to search elsewhere for a donor.

Bone marrow transplants use the stem cells within the marrow to restore blood cell production to the patient. Father Schawe hopes the drive will dispel the notion that all stem-cell research is bad.  

“Some people have the misconception that the Church is totally against stem-cell research of any kind,” he said. “There are two different kinds of stem-cell research. The one that is not acceptable is embryonic” because it involves the destruction of an unborn child. “Adult stem-cell research has resulted in some very good things -- very ethical things.”

Once on the list, Father Schawe said that there are far more factors involved in matching bone marrow than there are in, say, matching blood types. In fact, matching bone marrow involves finding matches within the DNA level. This is why there is such a great need for donors, and it’s why the chances of being chosen for transplantation are one in several thousand.

While donors of all racial backgrounds are needed, the need for minority donors is far more dire.

“If a minority is in need of a transplant, you can almost be sure that the match will come from someone of the same ethnic background,” Father Schawe explained. “The least amount of people on the list are those from minority backgrounds.”

Because of the great need for minority donors, the donor program has received a grant that fully funds all those of minority blood or those of mixed descent. In other words, minority donors need not pay to donate.

If a person’s marrow is chosen to be transplanted into a patient, they will be contacted as to how to proceed. There will be no additional cost to the donor. For more information about bone marrow transplants, the transplantation process, and the national donor drive, go to www.marrow.org.

 

 

Se necesistan desesperadamente Hispanos donantes para el próximo Registro para Donación de Médula Ósea

 

El Padre Wesley Schawe, recién designado pastor de la Parroquia de Santo Domingo en Garden City, ha organizado un Registro para Donación de Médula Ósea que se llevará a cabo en tres parroquias durante las próximas semanas:

8 de marzo: Great Bend, 10am-3pm; Central Kansas Medical Center (Salón Santo Domingo)

9 de marzo: Ulysses, 10am-2pm en la Iglesia María- Reina de la Paz.

15 de marzo: Dodge City, 10am –3 pm ; Catedral de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe

Para aquellos que desean estar en el registro nacional, todo lo que deben hacer es llegar, firmar su desición y tomar un palillo de algodón y frotarlo en la garganta. 

“Es un acto de servicio a otros”, dijo el Padre Schawe.

Mientras se necesitan donantes de todas las clases raciales, la necesidad de donantes Hispanos es mucho más extrema.  Si una minoría necesita un trasplante, usted casi puede estar seguro que  este coincidirá de alguien del mismo grupo étnico,” explicó el Padre Schawe. “La menor parte de la cantidad de gente en la lista son aquellos de clases minoritarias”.

A causa de la gran necesidad de donantes de minoría, el programa de donante ha recibido un fondo que totalmente financia a todos aquellos donantes que son de la sangre de minoría o de descendencia mixta. En otras palabras, los donantes hispanos no tienen que pagar para donar. Las no minorías deben pagar 25 dólares para cubrir el trabajo de laboratorio.

Los transplantes de médula ósea son usados para tratar varias enfermedades de la sangre y sistema inmunológico. Más de 30,000 personas cada año son diagnosticadas con enfermedades que requieren transplante de médula ósea. De estos, sólo el 30 por ciento pudiera encontrar uno que coincida dentro de su familia.  Todo el resto- cerca  de 20,000 personas anualmentetendrán que buscar un donante en otro lugar.

Los transplantes de médula ósea usan las células madres dentro de la médula para restaurar la producción de célula sanguínea para el paciente.  El Padre Schawe espera que la donación disipe la noción que toda investigación de célula madre es mala. Algunas personas tienen el mal concepto que la Iglesia está totalmente en contra de la investigación de la célula madre de todo tipo”, él dijo. “La que no es aceptable es la investigación embrionaria, porque ella involucra la destrucción de un bebé que no ha nacido”. “Las investigaciones de la célula madre adulta han resultado en algunas cosas muy buenascosas muy éticas”.

Si la médula de una persona es escogida para ser trasplantada en un paciente, la persona será contactada y se le instruirá sobre el procedimiento. No habrá ningún costo adicional para el donante. Para más información sobre trasplantes de médula ósea, el proceso de trasplante, y  el Registro   Nacional del  Donante, visite la página  www.marrow.org.