Hi Andy,
It took me awhile to get a DNA test organised and completed for my daughter, who is now nearly 12. You see, none of the doctors I had originally seen, saw the value in getting her DNA tested, even though her blood tests were indicative of thalassaemia minor and I am an alpha carrier myself. They kept telling me that minors are asymptomatic so my daughter should wait till she plans on having a family!!!!
However I persisted to get the DNA test done (even though one doctor said getting a DNA test "is too academic" and another was not willing to get the lab to do it because of her age; due to the clinic's cost-cutting measures). On one occasion a doctor sent us off to a laboratory that did not do the test - a waste of a blood test and anxiety for my then 11 year old.
So I had to be very proactive and do the calling and research myself; called the laboratories in my town to find out which one did the test and whether they did it for children. Most of the laboratory people were great actually and gave me lots of useful information and it was from them that I worked out how to ASK MY DOCTOR FOR A REFERRAL.
So it was just a matter of finding a doctor to give me a referral to do the test. It took lots of patience and diplomacy, but I went back to the doctor who said it was "all too academic", with step by step instructions on what needed to be done to get a DNA test organised and he finally agreed. Phew!
Today I finally got the report of her DNA result. My daughter is heterozygous for the Poly A (A>G) mutation in the ALPHA2-GLOBIN, just like me. This is great, we have a result, we have information.
I am sharing this part of my story as I did not find out until my early 40s that I was thalassaemic and this affected my well-being greatly; physically and emotionally. I personally feel that information is not always "too academic"; but that it has so many practical implications. As minors are symptomatic having this knowledge can help us look better after ourselves and pace our lifestyles. My daughter now has this knowledge and no longer has to go through her life not knowing why her blood cells are microcytic and hypochromic, and why her Hb levels are lower; and why she gets tired when doing too much high impact sport at school.
If any of the readers on this website have problems getting a test done, persist and ring around if you need to. With advances in DNA testing, this should be more practicable these days. What is lacking is not so much the technology, but the awareness of the condition.