Devaanshi Mehta


Devaanshi Mehta was a British - Indian student and humanitarian. She started the Asian Donor Campaign, a UK-based non-profit organisation whose goal is to raise awareness for the need to get more Asians to donate their blood, bone marrow and organs. ADC also raises funds for hospitals doing research into critical and life limiting illnesses.

Biography

Devaanshi was born to Harkant and Kalyani Mehta in the Harrow suburb of London. She was one of four children born into a Hindu, Gujarati family. She had two older sisters, Jyotika and Tejal, and a younger brother, Dushyant. She went to the Cannon Lane and Pinner Wood Primary Schools, before attending Nower Hill High School.
At the age of nine, Devaanshi was diagnosed with a rare bone marrow condition aplastic anaemia. She underwent a bone marrow transplant in April 2007 and a top up of bone marrow in February 2008 at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London. Both donations were made by her younger brother Dushyant who was her sibling match. However, she was left chronically platelet and red cell dependent after the transplant. In addition, she inherited her brothers' rarer blood type AB-. Therefore it became increasingly difficult to source negative platelets for her, and she organised appeals via the media. This motivated Devaanshi to investigate problems other children faced sourcing blood, bone marrow and organs. She learnt that it was extremely difficult for people to find these products at the right time, because there were a lack of donors within the Asian community as a whole. These events inspired her to start fundraising and raising awareness regarding the importance of blood, bone marrow and organ donation, especially for the Asian communities. Asians have traditionally avoided donating blood and organs due to social or religious misconceptions.
In 2010, Devaanshi's lungs collapsed and she had comprehensive lung surgery at Great Ormond Street Hospital for children in Bloomsbury, London. Consequently she was put on palliative care. While her health was deteriorating, she organised charity fundraising events from her hospital bed. She also gave a number of interviews on television, radio and in print to raise awareness. Devaanshi also wrote a blog titled "My Story in My own Words", where she spoke candidly about her treatment and prognosis.

Death and influence

Devaanshi died on 28 June 2012 at the Great Ormond Street Hospital after a lengthy battle with her lung condition and chronic platelet transfusion dependency. She wrote: "Nothing more can be done for me now, but I want to make a difference to other children."
On 29 September 2013, nine staff members from Nower Hill High School, which Devaanshi had attended, cycled 36 miles from the school to Windsor Castle in Berkshire to raise £1,000 for the Great Ormond Street Hospital where she died.The staff at Nowerhill continue to do the annual bike ride in memory of Devaanshi every year since her death. There is also a pack placed in her school in her memory.

Awards

Devaanshi won the Jack Petchey Award for her fundraising and awareness campaigns in 2010, and was nominated for the Justgiving Young Fundraiser of the Year in 2011. Devaanshi was also recognised by the Well Child Foundation for the most inspirational child in the 12-15-year category in 2012.