Your little one can be a lifesaver.
When cord blood stem cells are transplanted into a patient, the stem cells can repopulate the patient's bone marrow with functional and healthy blood cells. Globally, they are used in treatments of patients suffering from over 80 conditions including blood cancers and disorders, immune deficiencies and genetic disorders.
Your baby will not need his umbilical cord after birth, but someone else could really use it. With over 70% of patients relying on unrelated patients for a matching stem cell unit, a cord blood transplant is more often than not, their last chance of survival.
Together, we can create a future where every patient who needs a stem cell transplant can live on.
Public cord blood banks like SCBB collect, process and store donated cord blood units (CBUs) for unrelated (allogenic) haematopoietic stem cell transplants. This is the standard treatment for haematological malignancies (e.g. Leukaemia) and non-malignant disorders (i.e. immune deficiencies, haemoglobinopathies and metabolic disorders).
All of the units donated and stored at SCBB are listed on international donor databases such as the Bone Marrow Donor Worldwide, accessible by Transplant Centres all around the world.
There is no charge to donors for the collection and banking of cord blood in SCBB. SCBB raises the funds required for the processing and cryopreservation of these donated CBUs. These units will be publicly available and no longer the property of the parents or the child.
All CBUs collected will undergo further testing. Only those of high cell quantity and quality will be processed and stored for future transplants. This ensures that publicly available CBUs are suitable for both adult and paediatric patients.
During the consent process, parents will choose their next option should the donated unit not meet donation criteria:
Step 1
Let your Ob/Gyn know about your intention to donate cord blood.
Step 2
Complete and submit the form via the link below from your 2nd trimester onwards.
Step 3
Our donor coordinators will reach out to you for the consent process. Compulsory forms include the Consent Form and Maternal Health Questionnaire.
If you need more time for consideration, please be informed that this step should be completed at the latest, 2 weeks before your EDD.
Step 4
On the day of delivery, have a hard copy or screenshot of the endorsed Consent Form with you. Without it, you will not be able to proceed with cord blood collection.
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