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Teenage daughter’s bone marrow saves dad’s life

Father with a beanie on stand next to a daughter with a white sweater on as they hold their hands together to make a heart shape
Father with a beanie on stand next to a daughter with a white sweater on as they hold their hands together to make a heart shape

For Hai Trinh, his disease started gradually. Fatigue. Bruising easily. He thought little of it.

As a mechanic, husband and father of two girls, he just kept pushing forward, attributing the persistent health challenges to his long working hours and physically demanding job.

When Hai finally went to his doctor, he learned he had low blood platelets, also called thrombocytopenia. The condition indicates less than 150,000 platelets per microliter of blood due to the failure of marrow cells to produce platelets. This leads to bruising, pinpoint red spots called petechiae and prolonged bleeding. Hai was also experiencing tiredness and other symptoms.

That was in the early 2010s.

Playing the waiting game

Hai Trinh and his youngest daughter, Viana.
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