This Article is From Oct 07, 2015

Dengue Has a Silver Lining - For Patients of Cancer

Dengue has created awareness about platelet donation for the first time here.

Mumbai: This year's dengue outbreak had a positive fallout - one that has made cancer patients smile: An increased awareness about platelet donation, and India's first platelet donors' registry.  

Platelets are critical in cancer care but there is a huge shortfall of donors. Now Mumbai's Tata Memorial Hospital - India's largest cancer care center -- is planning to build a platelet registry system that will record donors across India.

"Dengue created awareness about platelets for the first time and people have started talking about what platelets are and how we can help with that," said Dr Shripad Banavali, Head of the Medical and Pediatric Oncology department at Tata Memorial Centre.

One of India's first known platelet donors is Congress MP Priya Dutt, who has joined hands with Tata Memorial Hospital to make the initiative a success.

"When I was discussing platelet donation I realised I had donated platelets before," Ms Dutt told NDTV. "When my mother was sick 30 years ago, she required platelets. I was the only match available so they had to take it from me even though I was very young. I did not even realise what was going on."

Ms Dutt's mother, actor Nargis Dutt, had undergone the transfusion when she was undergoing cancer treatment at the Sloan Kettering Centre in United States. A couple of years later, the concept of platelet donation arrived in India.

But till now, donation has remained at a nascent stage, with platelets for cancer patients having to be sourced mostly from family and friends.

Mumbai-based engineer Sanjay Bapat, 48, is among the exceptions - having donated platelets 200 times over the last 10 years.

"I am proud that I have made the journey. It is a pleasure to see what I can do for my society," he told NDTV.

Unlike blood, which can be donated only once in six months, platelets can be donated twice a month and the gap between each donation can be as less at four days. The process is simple where the blood is routed into a machine where the platelet is separated and kept and the platelet-free blood is chanelled back to the body.

"The sets are new and disposable and there is chance of contracting infections," said Dr. Sunil Rajadhyaksha.

You can become a platelet donor by calling the Tata Memorial hospital on 022-24127096 to register and become a platelet donor to save lives.
.