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Opinion

The remarkable life-giving legacy of Sue Harris

Sue died 25 years ago this week, but her legacy is immense

February 10, 2022 10:46
SUE HARRIS
2 min read

This Sunday, 12th Adar, marks 25 years since Sue Harris lost her battle with leukaemia.

Five years earlier, shortly after her 30th birthday, she had been rushed into hospital and received the blood cancer diagnosis. With no siblings, and in need of a bone marrow donor to save her life, she would need to find a suitable unrelated donor. 

The biology of bone marrow, or as is it now called stem cell, donation centres on matching the HLA typing that each of us has. At its core are six numbers, rather like the lottery but, unlike your blood group, HLA type is influenced by ethnic origin. A Jewish patient with blood cancer is therefore more likely to find a match from a Jewish stem cell donor. 

When Sue was diagnosed, there were only 48 Jewish donors on the national register. So her friendship group, comprising former campus activists, launched a campaign to recruit donors.