Why we fight.
Aug. 2nd, 2007 01:31 pmFor the last eight months, I have been following the struggles of one child battling leukemia. Her name is Sydney Thweatt, & her parents have been keeping this blog since she was diagnosed with acute myelogenous leukemia last year.
Today is Sydney's birthday. She is eight years old.
She is having part of her lung removed today. She is suffering from complications caused by graft-versus-host disease following her bone marrow transplant.
I know Sydney & her family only through the internet, & only because Team in Training asked for volunteers to donate blood for her last December. They have been through so much. AML is a fearsome diagnosis: the five-year survival rate for people under 15 is 54.1%. However, because of research funded in part by activities like TNT, leukemia survival rates are continuously improving (14% in 1963, 35% in 1977, and 50% in 2003).
I hope & pray that Sydney will be in that 54.1%. The truth is, she is a very sick little kid right now. I've already given her some blood, now what I can give her is support via Team in Training.
And for that I need all of you.
52 days to the triathlon.
Today is Sydney's birthday. She is eight years old.
She is having part of her lung removed today. She is suffering from complications caused by graft-versus-host disease following her bone marrow transplant.
I know Sydney & her family only through the internet, & only because Team in Training asked for volunteers to donate blood for her last December. They have been through so much. AML is a fearsome diagnosis: the five-year survival rate for people under 15 is 54.1%. However, because of research funded in part by activities like TNT, leukemia survival rates are continuously improving (14% in 1963, 35% in 1977, and 50% in 2003).
I hope & pray that Sydney will be in that 54.1%. The truth is, she is a very sick little kid right now. I've already given her some blood, now what I can give her is support via Team in Training.
And for that I need all of you.
52 days to the triathlon.