Alumnaâs Bone Marrow Provides a Life-Saving Gift
When Rachel Buck â19 registered to be a bone marrow donor at an event at the University of New Haven, she never thought she would end up helping to save the life of a child with cancer. But thatâs exactly what she did â and she recently met the boy, who has recovered, and his family.
September 9, 2021
By Renee Chmiel, Office of Marketing and Communications
Rachel Buck â19 recently met Jacob and his family at a Bravehearts baseball game. (credit: WCVB NewsCenter 5)
When Rachel Buck â19 was a first-year student at the University of New Haven, she signed up during an event on campus to be a bone marrow donor. She says she didnât expect much to come out of it, but, years later, she ended up becoming a donor â and saving a young boyâs life.
âHaving cancer strike my own family, like so many others, I thought why not register?â said Buck, a four-year member of the . âOne of the statistics that was mentioned that really stuck with me was that only about 30 percent of patients can find a match within their family, leaving the other 70 percent to rely on the registry â strangers, basically. That really struck me because I couldnât imagine having a family member in need like that and not being able to help them.â
Rachel Buck â19.
Indeed, , whose mission is to register young, committed donors to be part of , reports that a patientâs sibling has only a 30 percent chance of matching their Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) type and becoming a possible donor. The teamed up with the foundation to host the âGet in the Gameâ event that Buck attended on campus to encourage members of the University community to register.
Shortly before Buck graduated, she got the call that she was a match. While on the phone answering health questions during a senior trip, she was told she was the number one match for a then one-year-old boy named Jacob. She agreed to be his donor, and hearing his story hit home.
âLearning he was 14 months old at the time really struck me since I have two nieces close to his age,â she explains. âI couldnât even imagine what his family was going through. From that moment, I was very eager to do what I could.â
âTheir strength and resilience deserve recognitionâ
Because Jacob had an aggressive type of cancer, he needed a stem cell transplant. The first appointment for the âharvestâ of Buckâs cells had to be rescheduled so that Jacob could complete another round of chemotherapy. This would ensure he was strong enough to receive her cells.
Just a few days before her birthday, Buck, who had recently moved to Boston, went to for the procedure, which took about an hour and a half. Doctors removed marrow from her pelvis while she was completely under anesthesia, and she was released the same day. Her lifesaving donation was then airlifted to the hospital in which Jacob was being treated.
âAlthough it was an intimidating șÚÁÏÉç when youâre looking at it all at once, the process was a breeze,â said Buck, a medical technologist in the clinical microbiology lab at . âI would do it again in a heartbeat.â
A year after the procedure, Buck was allowed to release her information to Jacobâs family. They hoped to meet around the two-year anniversary of the transplant. When Buck got a call from her contact at Be the Match, she initially thought she was a match for someone else.
Instead, she was told the was hosting events each Friday to encourage more people to sign up to be donors. On the last Friday of the season, they wanted to set up a donor-recipient meeting â with her and Jacob. The hope was that this would increase publicity and awareness of the need for more donors.
âI was insanely nervous,â admits Buck. âI was worried they wouldnât like me, or that Jacob, being a three-year-old, would run away from me! They arenât a family that seeks the limelight, but for everything they have been through, their strength and resilience deserve recognition.â
Rachel Buck â19 met Jacobâs family, as well as his transplant doctor (second from right), and stem cell coordinator (far right).
âRachel is a heroâ
When Buck met Jacob and his family at the game last month, they immediately connected. Buckâs family and some of Jacobâs extended family were also in attendance, and the families spent the following weekend together. She describes meeting them as âemotionalâ and that she was on âcloud nineâ following their meeting.
âIt wasnât until I met him in person that what I had done really began to sink in,â said Buck. âI feel like I just gained a whole family, and I could not be more thankful. Itâs always been an honor to be a part of his journey, and to now be a part of his life moving forward is the greatest gift. It was like we all just clicked, and I felt like Iâve known them forever.
âI didnât even realize how hard Jacobâs fight was until I met his transplant doctor,â continued Buck. âI got to sit on the ground and play with rocks with Jacob, and his transplant doctor said that a year ago, something as simple as this would not even be possible. It would have been too dangerous for him to do. To know that I was able to do something that was honestly so easy and simple and that could turn his life around, itâs unbelievable.â
, football head coach emeritus at and president and founder of the Andy Talley Bone Marrow Foundation, was also there when Buck met Jacob and his family.
âIt was extremely heartwarming to see Rachel meet the little boy for the first time,â said Talley, an award-winning coach, advocate for marrow donation, and public speaker. âWhat an șÚÁÏÉç to see a life saver in person showing the world how to give back. Marrow donation is truly a gift of life, and in this case, Rachel is a hero. The University of New Haven is truly fortunate to have young women like Rachel who have given a three-year-old boy a chance for life!â
âBeing a donor is such a rewarding șÚÁÏÉçâ
The event at which Buck registered to be a donor is one of many that have been held at the University of New Haven. The Chargers football team has a long history of helping their fellow Chargers register to be donors, and they have a longstanding relationship with Be the Match.
Rachel Buck â19 signed up during an event on campus to be a bone marrow donor.
âFor the eight years I have been the Universityâs head coach, and for five years before that, our student athletes on the football team have donated their time and energy to promoting the Be the Match program on campus,â said , head football coach at the University. âWe are so happy that one of the members of our community was able to be matched up with a recipient through these efforts. We look forward to many more years working with the Be the Match program, and we wish Rachel and her match the best of luck in the future.â
Since only adults between the ages of 18 and 44 can register to be a match and because studies have shown that blood stem cells from younger donors lead to better survival rates for recipients, there is always a need for more people to register to be a match for someone such as Jacob. Buck hopes that her and Jacobâs story will encourage more people to register. Sheâs grateful that what she gave saved a life â and gave her âa new little brother.â
âBeing a donor is such a rewarding șÚÁÏÉç,â she said. âOut of my 23 years of life, there has not been anything that can top this, and there probably wonât for quite some time. Being able to donate does so much more than help that one patient. You arenât just saving the life of that patient, you are helping their families, their friends, their communities. The good that comes from this goes way beyond what you would think, and I was lucky enough to realize this when meeting Jacobâs family.â