Family in appeal for baby Ronnie

By Martin Neville

Monday, October 22, 2012

 

Family in appeal for baby Ronnie

Baby Ronnie Manders, with his brother, James-Thomas.

A HEARTFELT plea has been made by the family of a seriously ill baby for Islanders to attend an Anthony Nolan bone marrow recruitment event and possibly help save his, and other’s, lives.

Ronnie Manders, 14 months, was diagnosed with juvenile myelomonocytic leukaemia, a very rare blood disorder, in July.

Doctors told his family a bone marrow transplant was Ronnie’s only hope of survival. They are now working urgently with the blood cancer charity, Anthony Nolan, to find a match.

Mum Whitney, who was born and grew up on the Isle of Wight, said: "Although Ronnie is having chemo, it will not cure him — just buy us a bit more time in which to find a donor he needs so much."

Whitney, 25, moved to the Midlands when she married James, 34, and they now run a catering business in Redditch, Worcestershire.

Ronnie, whose grandfather, Tommy Booth, is chairman of Sandown and Shanklin Rugby Club, was born in Redditch hospital and is receiving treatment at Birmingham Children’s Hospital.

His aunt, Christie-Lee Booth, still lives on the Island and is organising a recruitment event on Thursday, October 25, from 3pm until 7pm, at Sandown and Shanklin RFC, in Station Approach. People aged between 16 and 30 can sign up to the bone marrow register to see if they are a match for someone like Ronnie.

As well as finding a match for their little boy, the family wants to raise awareness of the charity Anthony Nolan and the urgent need for more people to sign up to the bone marrow register.

• For further information, visit anthonynolan.org or facebook.com/rallyforronnie

Reporter: martinn@iwcpmail.co.uk

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by Christie-Lee Booth

23rd October 2012, at 09:00:32

Hi Kevin,

Anthony Nolan can't put any one on the register over the age of 30.
However if you still wanted to join the British Bone Marrow Register, you can either go to http://www.nhsbt.nhs.uk/bonemarrow/ or if you regisater to give blood or already give blood then you can ask to be put on to the bbmr register next time you go as long as you are aged 18 - 49.

Thanks,

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by kevin froment

22nd October 2012, at 13:26:22

why cant us older folk do it then, is there a medical reason, if not i would do it in an instant, whats a little needle compared to a life

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by jan hickman

22nd October 2012, at 09:06:26

i am too old or i wouldnt hesitate...hate to think of this family in pain, buying time with chemo for a much loved child, i urge fellow islanders to support this.

Any views or opinions presented in the comments above are solely those of the author and do not represent those of the Isle of Wight County Press.

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