Hello Shikha,
I am very new to this forum, I joined last Thursday (Sep 14, 2006), the day after our 2 month old daughter, Piu, was diagnosed with thalassemia (both her beta-globin genes are mutated, and one of them is a null mutation - beta-0, so most likely she will be beta-thal-major).
We are originally from India (I am from Kolkata and my wife from Jamshedpur), but currently living in Boston. Both of us are beta-thal carriers (we found out the hard way last Wednesday, after the genetic test results came back). What makes me sad (and at the same time angers me the most) is that for one, there is no mandatory testing for thal for newborns in our part of the world (I think the problem is not only restricted to India, but to the whole south-east asian region) and secondly, our blood reports always showed depressed MCV (in the 60s) and Hb (11-12), but the doctors (mis)diagnosed it as anemia and put us on iron supplements.
As Andy and you rightly point out that there needs to be a global awareness about thalassemia, especially in south-east asia, where ignorance about this is mainstream. For sure, my wife and I did not have any awareness about thalassemia when we were living in India. We did not know anyone who had thalassemia - in our family or otherwise (maybe these information are suppressed due to a false thought of social stigma, I dont understand why though .. i am just thinking out aloud here). If it is so common, then there should have been information disseminated by the health officials and the government (it is me just venting .. please bear with me).
I am really glad that I have found this forum and when I read thorugh the various posts, gain knowledge and information and hear various views from other people, it gives me tremendous hope that with the current (and possibly future) medical developments, current and future thalassemic patients will have a full, rich and a significantly better quality of life and will outlive their parents.
I think we are taking our first steps towards that direction, with the introduction of the oral chelator that hopefully will replace desferal pump all over the world. There have also been some discussions regarding BMT and unrelated cord blood transplantation (for kids who don't have siblings).
Only if the awareness and education about thalassemia can become mainstream ....... one can only hope that it becomes a reality in my lifetime
As you rightly said, I strongly believe that our children are no different from the other children in the world .... they are just normal kids who ask for our attention and love just like any other kid. They are just a bit more anemic and so need some special attention for their well-being just like any other kid would require for their ailments.
Regards,
Bostonian_04