Anonymous wrote:He probably didn’t think it was that big of a deal and he assumed you don’t have the trait. I have the trait and it has never affected my life, honestly I don’t think about it until I go to the doctor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did he intentionally withhold it or did it just not come up, he didn't think about it until something made him think of it in the context of a conversation. Did he assume you knew as he has siblings / parents / family with sickle cell disease?
How does he know he is a carrier of the gene?
Is there sickle cell disease in his family? Did you ever discuss it?
OP here - His parents found out after routine newborn screening in the hospital after he was born. I'm not aware of any Sickle Cell disease in his family.
Anonymous wrote:So he is a carrier with no complications and you are a eugenicist. Got it
Anonymous wrote:Did you do genetic testing before trying to conceive? I did and am carrier for multiple things which I can't even recall but had my husband test to see if he also was and he wasn't so it doesn't matter. If you cared about carrier genetics why wouldn't you both test
Anonymous wrote:I get it. DH has a blood disorder which he said won’t impact my kids since I wasn’t a carrier. Now the kid needs minor surgery and has to see a hemonc to make sure everything is ok. I was also angry.
Anonymous wrote:Being a sickle cell carrier lends an advantage - it's protective against malaria (that's why lots of black people have the gene -- the gene helped carriers survive in africa for a long time).
having sickle cell requires two parents, so your children will be fine (and will actually have an advantage).
https://www.reddit.com/r/DebateEvolution/comments/1gfav0r/the_argument_over_sickle_cell/
Anonymous wrote:DH baby trapped OP.
Anonymous wrote:Not everyone that has sickle cell trait is black, but everyone that has sickle cell trait has a black ancestor. They traced the origin of the gene back to one child that lived in Africa 7,300 years ago.Anonymous wrote:I am a carrier of the trait, as was my mom. My mom told me I was negative so I was totally surprised when I came up positive during my pregnancy labs. This is not a big deal and not worth you getting an amniocentesis over. Your child has a 50 percent chance of being a carrier. One of my kids is, the other isn't. We need to stay well hydrated and listen to our bodies, that is all. Please calm down. And not only black people can have it. This is misinformation.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-43373247
https://www.the-independent.com/life-style/health-and-families/health-news/hidden-black-ancestry-linked-to-rise-in-sickle-cell-blood-disorder-738008.html
Anonymous wrote:We all have some genetic predisposition to something. His is something known, yours isn't. Should it determine who you marry and have a child with?
Anonymous wrote:DH decided to wait to tell me that he is a carrier of the Sickle Cell gene until AFTER we found out that I'm pregnant (when he has apparently been aware of this since childhood). I am devastated and have been floored since he told me. There is a possibility that the gene could be passed onto our child. Our child won't have full-blown Sickle Cell as both parents have to carry the gene for that to happen, but the point is that I do not want my child to inherit an abnormal gene. I have been doing research and found a case of a child that passed away from complications due to simply having 1 Sickle Cell gene. (https://www.ktnv.com/13-investigates/she-lost-her-baby-then-her-freedom-las-vegas-mother-wrongfully-accused-in-shaken-baby-syndrome-case)
In addition, I'm angry that he withheld this information from me when we were trying to conceive. I feel duped. I'm not sure where to go from here.