Nationwide search for toddler's stem cell match comes to Winnipeg, highlights lack of Black donors - Action News
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Manitoba

Nationwide search for toddler's stem cell match comes to Winnipeg, highlights lack of Black donors

An Alberta father is in Winnipeg this weekend as a national search for a stem cell match for his two-year-old son with cancer continues and hes raising awareness about the desperate need for Black stem cell donors along the way.

Less than 1% of donors on stem cell registry are of African descent, according to Canadian Blood Services

Two-year-old Ezra was diagnosed with a rare form of leukemia in May 2021. His father, Jacob Marfo, has been aiding a nationwide search for a stem cell donor of African descent. (Submitted by Jacob Marfo)

An Alberta father is in Winnipeg this weekend as a national search for a stem cell match for his two-year-old son with cancer continues and he's raising awareness about the desperate need for Black stem cell donors along the way.

Ezra Marfo was born in Lac La Biche, Alta.,in 2020 and was diagnosed with a rare form of leukemia the next year, said his father, Jacob Marfo.

Ezra went from being a happy, chunky baby to being unable to live a normal life due to extensive medical treatments.

The toddler is currently in a Calgary hospital as his father helps searchfor a potential donor, since a stem cell transplant is required as part of Ezra's treatment,Marfo said.

"[Ezra's] life is limited to just the size of a hospital crib," he toldguest host Keisha Paulduring a Saturday interview withCBC's Weekend Morning Show.

The child is currently "OK, [but] not in the very best shape. We are taking it day by day," said Marfo.

Marfo donated his own stem cells after he was found to be a partial match for his son. However, a complete match is needed now, as Ezra has since relapsed.

The national search has been to, or plans to stop in,Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, Montrealand Toronto,Marfosaid.

Registering to becomea potential stem cell donor is a quick and painlessprocess, which involves a cheek swab.

Three swab drives to try to find donors were held in Winnipeg Saturday. A fourth will be held Sunday, from 12:30 p.m. to 3 p.m., at Church of the Pentecost, at 375 Salter St.

People can alsosign up online to receive a test kit at home.

While anyone aged 17 to 35 can donate, Marfo said they are specifically looking for donors of African descent.

Marfo and his family are from Ghana, and a matching donor is more likely among those who have a similar genetic background to his son, he said.

The problem is that less than one per cent of the people on the Canadian stem cell registry are of African descent, according to Canadian Blood Services.

Marfo said Canadian Blood Services could better serveethnic minorities by informing people that even if they cannot donate blood due to malaria history or other reasons, they can still donate plasma and stem cells.

"Canadian Blood Services need to do a lot of education in their minority world. They are not doing that at the moment," he said.

"That is what I've heard from so many people from African and Caribbean communities they feel grieved," he said, adding that he would like to see morefocus on targeted education for diverse communities.

Every donor counts

Kennedy Armah is a nursewho volunteered at one of the Saturday swab drives forEzra.

She thinks the Canadian stem cell registry for Black donors is so small becausethere's not enough knowledge about blood donations or what is required.

Armah also said thatEzra's situation is not unique.

"Ezra is not the only one in such a situation there are a lot of Africans who are out there in similar situations," she told Radio-Canada in an interview on Saturday.

Every donor counts, she said, and the swab drives for Ezra are one way to create awareness about stem cell donations among the African community in Winnipeg and in Canada at large.

That's a sentiment Ezra's father echoed, encouraging people to register as donors.

"Not only are you doing this for Ezra, you're doing this for the hundreds of thousands of Black people who are waiting to find a match on the stem cell registry."


For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of.You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.

With files from Keisha Paul and Anne-Louise Michel