A Texas State bone marrow registry program became a national model. Now, its leader is under
A Texas State bone marrow registry program became a national model. Now, its leader is under investigation for diverting money to support an affair.
For over a decade, Texas State University students across the San Marcos campus and at public universities across South Texas have urged schoolmates to help cancer patients by joining the national bone marrow registry.
After a quick cheek swab, a students name and tissue profile are entered into a national database. That directory is used by patients diagnosed with blood cancers, including leukemia, who are in desperate need of a bone marrow match.
So far, Texas States Cancer Advocacy Movement for Colleges and Outreach, or CAMCO, has registered 20,000 students on campus as potential bone marrow donors. The campus group is housed in the radiation therapy program and led by the program chair, Reynaldo Lozano.
Lozano, 62, helped Texas State create its radiation therapy program in 1998. By 2012, the department latched onto an existing bone marrow registry group on campus and enrolled thousands of students into the registry with the help of annual donations from local cancer care centers.
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https://www.chron.com/news/article/Texas-State-bone-marrow-registry-program-16825853.php