Monday, 21 December 2009

Unable to go out much, due to a combination of my ongoing Crowd Avoidance Scheme and thoroughly inclement weather, a lot of this year’s Christmas shopping has been done online. Packages have been arriving almost daily from Amazon, Play, and a whole host of other internet shopping outlets. All have been eagerly awaited by my wife who relishes in the process of wrapping presents almost as much as she does in opening them.

Today’s delivery isn’t much of a Christmas present but was one that I have been looking forward to and was beginning to get concerned that it would not arrive in time. The delivery contained 9 empty blood collection tubes and now it was here I had less than a day to fill the tubes and “return to sender”.

A research team at the National Institute of Health in Maryland are conducting research into current treatments for Hairy Cell Leukaemia with a view to increasing their effectiveness, extending remission times, and possibly taking steps toward curing the disease. For any medical research to be worthwhile the number of subjects studied needs to be as large as possible and this is clearly a bit of a bugger for those studying rare diseases whose subjects may be few and far between.

Having contacted the doctor running the study, forms were filled in and arrangements made for blood to be taken here that could then be tested there. Not an easy task as it has meant coordinating the availability of someone to take the blood in my local NHS hospital in sequence with the work of another Phlebotomist in the US who needs to do more tests two days later once Federal Express have shipped the tubes the five thousand, nine hundred and three miles between the two.

The first half of this mission has been successfully completed although not without undue trials in establishing just what paperwork you need for shipping your own blood around the world.

That and the mild sting in the arm induced by filling all nine tubes is all behind me now and I hope that, in the same way that a group of my colleagues’ blood donations a few months ago have helped people in my position start on the road to recovery, my relatively small donation today can help in the quest for me, and the handful of other sufferers around the world, to live completely normal lives.

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