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Army HIVE Christmas and New Year Closures

The majority of Army HIVEs will be closed after duties on Fri 19 Dec 25 and will reopen on Mon 5 Jan 26. There may be localised variations to these dates for individual HIVEs.

Army HIVE HQ is also closed during the festive fortnight, so any enquiries submitted via the ‘If you need further information’ MS Forms function on our UK, Cyprus or Overseas blogs will be answered when we return in the New Year.

We will periodically cover private messages on our Army HIVE Facebook platform (and X/Instagram where possible) whilst we are closed. However, this will not be 24/7 and should not be relied upon for anything that requires an urgent response.

To support our customers with more immediate requirements however, the Army HIVE HQ email will provide a comprehensive out of office autoreply, detailing points of contact that are either 24/7, emergency providers, or open over the festive leave fortnight. To receive this autoreply, please email:
RC-Pers-HIVEComms-0Mailbox@mod.gov.uk

Individual HIVEs will also provide localised contact details for Christmas and New Year cover wherever possible in their automated replies. Therefore, if you email your closest HIVE, which you can find on HIVE’s page on the Army website, their autoreply may be of additional assistance.

Army HIVE wishes all of its Service community customers, and our internal and external stakeholders, a very happy Christmas and New Year. We look forward to continuing our support and engagement in 2026.


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October 28, 2024

Stem cell donation - sign up to save a life!

 


Every 20 minutes someone in the UK is diagnosed with blood cancer.

Stem cell transplants are used to treat blood cancers like leukaemia, aplastic anaemia as well as other diseases of the immune system. Chemotherapy can help in some cases, but for many people a stem cell transplant is the only chance of a cure.

30,000 new donors are needed in the UK each year to find matches for the steadily rising number of stem cell transplants taking place in the UK every year. Stem cells are found in the bone marrow – a soft, spongy tissue at the centre of certain bones – and can produce all essential blood cells, including red and white cells and platelets (which stop bleeding).

Give blood and save a life

Sign up today

Supporting each other – give blood and save a life

For a successful stem cell transplant, both donor and recipient need matching tissue types and patients are more likely to match with donors of a similar ethnic heritage. Finding a match is extremely difficult, even with millions of donors registered around the world. Patients of Asian and Black heritage, or from other mixed ethnicities are under-represented on the register and are less likely to find a life-saving match.

We have a richly diverse armed forces and civil service, with many non-UK nationals within our service, along with their family members who could all play a part in saving someone’s life. In addition to our Black and Asian colleagues, we’re encouraging more of our young service personnel and civil servants (age 17+) to donate. The average age is 43 and rising, and it’s critical that younger people sign up as younger donors result in a higher success rate.

Sign up today, and help ensure that everyone has an equal chance of being cured of blood cancer, both now and in the future.

Your stories

MOD Defence Infrastructure Organisation’s Manzoor Hussain has personal experience of stem cell donation, due to being in the rare and emotional position of saving a family member through being a donor.

His daughter Aneesa was 17 when she was diagnosed with Very Severe Aplastic Anaemia, a rare and life-threatening blood disorder. Following months of treatments and blood and platelet transfusions up to three times per week, Aneesa’s health was seriously deteriorating, and she was told her life was dependent on receiving a stem cell transplant. For six months there were no matches and Aneesa and her family were becoming desperate with worry. White people have a high chance of a stem cell match, but for people from an ethnic minority background, the chances fall below 40%. Miraculously, Manzoor was matched to his daughter, albeit at a lower than preferred match rate for success, so to proceed was taking a risk. The stem cell transplant was a huge success and thanks to Manzoor’s donation, Aneesa is now healthy and active, living a full and enjoyable life.

You can watch her story here: Stem Cell Donation_DIO dad saves daughter

How do I donate?

The most common method to donate stem cells is through blood, where the stem cells are separated and then your blood is returned, but in 10% of cases it may be best to take them directly from your

bone marrow in a short procedure under general anaesthetic in hospital, followed by 5 days rest to recover.

Further information:
  • If you are already a blood donor you can register next time you give blood
  • Ask advice from your Medical Officer or GP