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Our journey to adopt our daughter was not an easy one
When she
was only 15 months old, Kieu was abandoned by her family at an orphanage in Ha
Long Bay City, Vietnam. Kieu, like many others of South Asian descent, suffers
from beta thalassemia major, or Cooley's Anemia, a blood disease that lasts
throughout life.
Michele
and Doug Henney found out about Kieu through an organization called Children of
Peace, International. This charitable organization was founded by Binh Rybacki
(formerly Nguyen Thi Thanh Binh) who had fled Vietnam as Communist troops
overran Saigon in 1975. She and her family settled in the United States. In
1993 she returned to Vietnam as a translator for a group of doctors and during
that trip, found children who were working as street peddlers and prostitutes.
This disturbed her so greatly she formed Children of Peace, International to
help improve lives of these children.

Binh
Rybacki had met little Kieu and realized that the child desperately needed help
in order to survive. Through contacts, she was put in touch with the Henneys.
This couple barely hesitated before they agreed to adopt Kieu and the paperwork
was started. When they met Kieu for the first time, it was apparent she needed
an immediate blood transfusion, which she received. Within a very short time
literally a few months the adoption was approved and Michele and Doug brought
their new daughter home to Bellingham, Washington, where she met her big sister,
Megan.
Before
agreeing to the adoption, the Henneys spent hours researching beta thalassemia
and the treatments the disease required. They also discovered that President
Clinton had signed a law that not only gave immediate US citizenship to any baby
adopted from overseas, but also mandated that US health insurance companies had
to treat these adopted children as newborns and thus cover them for any
problems, including pre-existing conditions. In June of 2004, the family moved
to Eugene when Michele took a position as Instructor of Accounting at the
University of Oregon.
Since her
arrival in the US, Kieu has been receiving regular red blood cell transfusions
which have helped this little girl develop as normally as possible. One of the
downsides of the numerous transfusions is her body has developed antibodies that
make blood from many donors incompatible. Doctors realized they needed to find
a few antibody-compatible donors to whom Kieu's body would not react. At the
beginning of 2006, four regular Lane Memorial Blood Bank donors were asked to be
dedicated donors for her. These donors agreed and now Kieu receives blood
transfusions that her body doesn't try to reject.
One cure for thalassemia is
a bone marrow transplant and the search for a compatible donor has already
begun. Finding that donor may take many years, so in the meantime, Kieu and her
family are thankful that there are people in the community who are willing to
give of themselves to help a child they have never met.
Contributed by Lane Memorial
Blood Bank
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