-eng- Raising Funds For Chisa-s Treatment Uncen... Online
But inside room 412, time has stopped. A little girl with fading braids is drawing a picture. It is a picture of a syringe with wings, flying toward a giant red heart.
Instead, she lies down next to her daughter and whispers, "We are waiting for the special medicine, baby. It’s coming on a fast plane."
By The Family of Chisa | Special Report
Email: SaveChisa@[CampaignDomain].org Chisa’s family has authorized the use of all medical records, scans, and doctor’s notes for verification. Transparency reports are updated every 72 hours.
"The 'uncensored' approach here is not pseudoscience. It is frontier science," Dr. Han explains during a video call from the ICU waiting room. "Chisa’s T-cells have become traitors. The CAR-T therapy will re-engineer her own immune cells into assassins that target the rogue B-cells. Then, the monoclonal antibody acts as a 'peacekeeper,' preventing future attacks. In an adult, this is aggressive. In a child, it is revolutionary. But we cannot move forward without the funds. The lab requires a 50% deposit just to culture her cells." -ENG- Raising funds for Chisa-s treatment Uncen...
Mira doesn't tell her that they are waiting for a wire transfer. She doesn't tell her that they have started a GoFundMe, that her father has started a TikTok dancing for dollars, that the local church held a bake sale that raised exactly $847.
"Standard medicine has hit a wall," explains Dr. Han, a specialist in pediatric neuro-immunology who has taken Chisa’s case pro bono. "We are now in 'Uncen' territory—unconventional, unlicensed, and uncensored by standard medical boards. We need a combination of CAR-T cell therapy (normally reserved for leukemia) and a monoclonal antibody that has only been approved for multiple sclerosis in adults. For a child of Chisa’s size and condition, this is a world-first attempt." But inside room 412, time has stopped
"We have sold our car," Mira lists the numbers quietly. "We have emptied my mother’s retirement fund. We have taken a second mortgage on a home that is now worth half of what we owe. We are at zero. But Chisa is not at zero. Her heart is still beating."