Tissue type is not random, but inherited -
so patients in need of a transplant are most
likely to find a compatible donor within
their own ethnic community.
The
African-Caribbean community is the most
likely source of a donor for an
African-Caribbean patient, for example. And
the same is true for all of us - Chinese,
Asian, Caucasian, Mediterranean, Jewish,
whichever ethnic community we belong to.
The bottom line
The bottom line is – it’s much harder to
find a donor for a non-Caucasian patient.
So for UK patients, awareness – and the
search for a donor – has to begin with
communities in the UK.
If you are from a black and minority
ethnic community, please give this some
serious thought : your community needs you,
and you might just need it.
How to join the register >
Breakdown by ethnic background of
volunteers on the Anthony Nolan Register
-end February 2007
| Ethnic background |
Total |
| African |
3,576 |
| African-Caribbean |
11,138 |
| Asian |
12,027 |
| Eastern European |
469 |
| Hispanic |
145 |
| Jewish |
7,601 |
| Mediterranean |
3,501 |
| Middle Eastern |
412 |
| Northern European |
301,922 |
| Oriental |
1,083 |
| Ethnic origin not declared |
32,178 |
| Other (mixed race) |
8,070 |