dwib.org
DWIB
http://www.dwib.org/hot-tips.php
How to join the Register. You must be aged between 18 and 44 years old (registered before your 45 th birthday) and be a blood donor. You can join when you next give blood, or even at the same time as your first donation. Who is eligible to join? Help organise and run a donor recruitment clinic. What is bone marrow? What happens if I match? What happens in a transplant? Why we need donors from all ethnic groups. Why we urgently need more men to join the Register. Who might need a transplant? All contents ...
dwib.org
DWIB
http://www.dwib.org/news.php
2008 Leukaemia Awareness Campaign March. Belgrave Square near the Ghana High Commission, via Parliament Square, St Thomas Hospital, London South Bank University. Beverley De-Gale and Orin Lewis of the ACLT regret to announce the death on Wednesday 8th October 2008, of their son Daniel De-Gale, aged 21 (born 14th March 1987). The late Mr. Danny Whyte, Founder and Executive Director of DWIB Leukaemia Trust has been laid to rest, Friday 20th July 2007, at Osu Cemetery, Accra, Ghana. As part of its commitmen...
dwib.org
DWIB
http://www.dwib.org/appeal4sufferers.php
Croydon schoolgirl Imogin Appiah's desperate plea for bone marrow donor. The mother of a six-year-old girl with leukaemia has said that if her daughter does not get a bone marrow transplant she will die. The Croydon Guardian has been highlighting the plight of little Imogin Appiah, 6, who has been diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. How to donate to DWIB. Site designed by Whitesys Ltd.
dwib.org
DWIB
http://www.dwib.org/gallery.php
How to donate to DWIB. All contents within DWIB Website is provided for general information only, and should not be treated as a substitute for the medical advice of your own doctor or any other health care professional. DWIB is not responsible or liable for any diagnosis made by a user based on the contents of DWIB website. DWIB is not liable for the contents of any external internet sites listed, nor does it endorse any. Site designed by Whitesys Ltd.
dwib.org
DWIB
http://www.dwib.org/communication.php
FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions). How to donate to DWIB. All contents within DWIB Website is provided for general information only, and should not be treated as a substitute for the medical advice of your own doctor or any other health care professional. DWIB is not responsible or liable for any diagnosis made by a user based on the contents of DWIB website. DWIB is not liable for the contents of any external internet sites listed, nor does it endorse any. Site designed by Whitesys Ltd.
dwib.org
DWIB
http://www.dwib.org/merchandise.php
Silicon Armbands and Rings. Yarie Enye Music CD. Yarie Enye Music Video. Silicon Armbands and Rings. Yarie Enye Music CD and Video. Very Soon DWIB will start selling its merchandise like T-Shirts, Caps, Silicon Armbands and Rings, Yarie Enye Music CD and Video, Metal, Badges etc. How to donate to DWIB. Site designed by Whitesys Ltd.
dwib.org
DWIB
http://www.dwib.org/equiry.php
Have someone contact me. How did you hear of us? Please Select your age group. British Indian Ocean Territory. Heard and McDonald Islands. Saint Kitts And Nevis. Saint Pierre and Miquelon. Saint Vincent and The Grenadines. Sao Tome and Principe. South Georgia And The South Sandwich Islands. Svalbard and Jan Mayen Islands. Turks and Caicos Islands. United States Minor Outlying Islands. Wallis and Futuna Islands. Fields marked ( *. Are required to be completed. How to donate to DWIB.
dwib.org
DWIB
http://www.dwib.org/leukaemia/overview.php
Leukemia is a form of cancer that begins in the blood-forming cells of the bone marrow - the soft, inner part of the bones. Leukemia - which literally means "white blood" in Greek - occurs when there is an excess of abnormal white blood cells in the blood. Known as leukocytes, these cells are so plentiful in some individuals that the blood actually has a whitish tinge. There are more than a dozen varieties of leukemia, but the following four types are the most common:. Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL),.
dwib.org
DWIB
http://www.dwib.org/children.php
Leukaemia is a cancer of the blood. It's not hereditary. You can't catch it. Yet it kills more of our children than any other disease. And incidence is increasing.In a leukaemic child, the bone marrow produces large numbers of abnormal white cells. These are unable to carry out their normal function of fighting infection. In addition, these abnormal cells displace the normal production of red cells and platelets which are vital in supplying oxygen and stopping bleeding respectively. Tissue matching must ...
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