Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Community Blood Center of the Carolinas and Baxter Village Call on Community to Help Jan. 28

The Community Blood Center of the Carolinas (CBCC) is teaming up with
The Helping Hands of Baxter Village to host a community blood drive in
honor of two young residents who are undergoing treatment for cancer.
The blood drive will take place on Saturday, Jan. 28, 2012 from
9:00AM-3:00PM at the Village Hall in Baxter Village in Fort Mill, S.C.
Sign up to donate blood at www.ncdonor.com/donate and use sponsor
code: "helpinghands." For questions, contact Amanda Ballog at
704-972-4712 or at ABallog@cbcc.us.

The drive is in support of two Baxter Village girls – 13-year-old
Justine Farinick Seibel and almost three-year-old Libby Kern (left and
right in photo). Justine was diagnosed with Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia
on Sept. 17, 2010. Since then, she has received over 200 doses of
chemotherapy, 55 blood and or platelet transfusions, six bone marrow
aspirations and 20 lumbar punctures. She hasn't let cancer stand in
her way of participating on the Baxter Barracuda's for the past six
years, including last year when she swam in three meets and served as
a junior swim coach all while undergoing weekly infusions of
chemotherapy. She is also a junior black belt from the Peaceful dragon
and she did tai chi through some of her initial treatment. The next 12
months of her treatment will include MRIs, spinal injections, daily
oral chemotherapy and steroids, and monthly infusions of chemotherapy,
and possible surgeries for her weight-bearing joints.

Libby was diagnosed with an optic pathway glioma (a brain tumor of the
optic nerve) on Friday, Sept. 3, 2010 at barely 19 months old. Since
then, the tumor has undergone several confusing changes and Libby has
suffered total vision loss in her left eye. Because the tumor has
proven to be inoperable and too invasive for radiation, Libby is
undergoing a regimen of chemotherapy for around 60 weeks. Despite
everything and her 'eye booboo,' Libby loves to dance, run around and
play with her two big sisters.

"We urge the community to lend a helping hand by donating blood to
honor Justine [Seibel] and Libby [Kern] and to help other local
patients requiring transfusion and the support of local blood donors,"
said Martin Grable, president and CEO ofCommunity Blood Center of the
Carolinas. "We are fortunate to have high quality medical care in our
region and the advances in medicine have never been more promising,
but when transfusion is required, it's our local donors that make the
difference."

As the primary blood supplier to the region, CBCC provides nearly 400
blood products every day to help patients being treated in area
hospitals. Cancer patients are primary and frequent patients in need
of blood and blood products; approximately 16% of red blood cells and
26% of platelets transfused in our region.

About Community Blood Center of the Carolinas
The Community Blood Center of the Carolinas (CBCC) is a non-profit
community-based blood center and the primary blood supplier to 21
regional hospitals, serving patients who live in 16 North Carolina and
three South Carolina counties. The mission of CBCC is to be the
steward of a community resource – life-saving blood and the vision is
to help build and strengthen the bonds of community. CBCC is strictly
a blood center, completely focused on gathering red blood cells,
platelets and plasma from volunteer donors to save local lives – every
drop of blood collected stays here to help people in the Carolinas.
The Community Blood Center of the Carolinas is a member of America's
Blood Centers, North America's largest network of community-based,
independent blood centers providing more than 50% of the nation's
blood supply.

For more information on community blood drives, visit www.cbcc.us or
call 704-972-4700. There are also CBCC donor centers located at: 4447
South Boulevard in Charlotte; 363 Church Street North Suite 170 in
Concord; 2524 East Franklin Blvd Suite E in Gastonia; and 600 Hospital
Drive in Monroe.

Visit and bookmark CBCC's virtual press room today. Become a "fan" of
the Community Blood center of the Carolinas onFacebook http://www.facebook.com/BloodCenter
or follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/CBCCarolinas.

In photo:
Baxter Village residents and cancer survivors Justine Seibel and Libby
Kern