By Marjorie Hernandez, mhernandez@VenturaCountyStar.com February 21, 2007
Fraternal
twins Hailey Joy and Ryan are true miracle babies, said their mother, Maria Kent.
After nine miscarriages, Kent and
her husband, Rick, became parents again after a surrogate agreed to carry the couple's embryos.
The babies
were born about six weeks premature June 6 at a Redlands hospital, and the Kents, who also have a daughter, Heather, 20, were
excited to return to their Simi Valley home when the babies were released 15 days later.
Now the Kents are praying
for another miracle. Doctors diagnosed Hailey Joy with acute lymphocytic leukemia, or ALL, on Oct. 4 and are looking for blood
and bone marrow donors for the 8-month-old girl.
Today at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles, a team of doctors will extract
spinal fluid from Hailey Joy and run tests. She will also go through a bone marrow biopsy and a round of chemotherapy, Maria
Kent said.
"She's been such a trouper," Kent said Monday. "She is such a happy baby, but with the chemotherapy, she
sometimes gets fussy. It has been hard on her."
Hailey Joy was diagnosed after Maria Kent rushed her to a Tarzana
emergency room. She said Hailey had a fever of 99 degrees and was vomiting.
"I thought it was just a normal baby virus,"
Maria Kent said. "I never would have guessed this."
Because of her diagnosis, Hailey Joy started chemotherapy treatments
at Childrens Hospital the next day and has had several blood transfusions since. By the end of October, doctors declared that
Hailey Joy was in remission. But on the Kents' visit to the hospital Feb. 12, doctors found more leukemia cells, Maria Kent
said.
Rick Kent said doctors told them that only one in 19 million infants is diagnosed with advanced leukemia.
Several
donor events are already in the works for blue-eyed Hailey Joy. Since her blood is the rarer O negative, the family is asking
interested donors to contact Leukemia & Lymphoma Society campaign manager Amber McCarty at 201-7150 or Children's Hospital
at 323-660-2450.
There is also a planned blood drive in May in Calabasas and a bone marrow donor event March 24 in
Simi Valley, McCarty said.
Those interested in learning if they could be a positive bone marrow match for Hailey Joy
or other leukemia patients should also call McCarty to register for the donor events.
"It will be a few weeks to a
month before doctors will know if Hailey Joy will actually need a bone marrow transplant," McCarty said.
"Right now,
we are trying to be vigilant; that way, if she needs one, there will be a ready donor available."
The Kents' friends
in the acting community are also lending a hand. Before Hailey Joy was diagnosed with ALL, she and her brother appeared in
"Grey's Anatomy," "Medium" and "Standoff."
On July 13, child actors from the soap opera "General Hospital" will host
a luau to raise money for leukemia patients at the Sportsmen's Lodge, 12825 Ventura Blvd., Studio City. A portion of the ticket
sales will benefit Hailey Joy's treatment. There will also be a bone marrow sign-up at the event.
Rick Kent, who rides
Harley-Davidson motorcycles, is also planning a "love ride" to raise money for his daughter.
Maria Kent, who worked
as a surgical assistant at a doctor's office in Thousand Oaks, is now focused on taking care of the twins and getting Hailey
Joy to her treatments. Rick Kent, who worked as a construction project manager, recently lost his job and is looking for another
position.
At their two-story home in Simi Valley, Maria Kent rocked older twin Ryan while Maria Kent's sister Debra
Nichols cradled Hailey Joy in her arms.
"It's definitely been very hard," Maria Kent said. "We're hanging on to faith,
but our biggest fear is losing her. But she's our little miracle and we're not going to give up."
A fund has been
established for Hailey Joy Kent at Washington Mutual. The account number for donations is 3134043615, or call McCarty.
|