
2-Year-Old Crew Rings Bell After Beating Liver Cancer
A toddler who survived liver cancer thanks to a living donor celebrated the end of his treatment by ringing the Bravery Bell at Cleveland Clinic. Crew Dearth's journey shows how organ donation saves even the youngest lives.
Two-year-old Crew Dearth walked down the hallways of Cleveland Clinic with one mission: to ring the bell that marks the end of his cancer battle.
The toddler is a liver cancer survivor whose life was transformed by a living organ donor. After completing his treatment, Crew got to participate in the hospital's beloved tradition of ringing the Bravery Bell, a moment that celebrates patients who have finished their cancer therapy.
Living liver donation allows healthy individuals to give a portion of their liver to someone in need. The liver is unique because it can regenerate, meaning both the donor's and recipient's liver portions grow back to normal size within months.
For young children like Crew, living donors often provide the best chance for survival. Pediatric patients can't always wait for deceased donor organs, making living donation a lifesaving option that delivers healthier organs with better outcomes.

Sunny's Take
The video of Crew's bell-ringing moment captures the raw emotion of his parents, who stood by their son through every step of his treatment. You can see in their faces the weight of worry lifting, replaced by joy and relief that only parents who've walked this path can truly understand.
This little boy's celebration represents countless hours of medical care, the selfless gift of a living donor, and a family's unwavering hope. His smile as he rang that bell reminds us that behind every organ donation statistic is a real person getting a second chance at life.
Crew's story highlights the critical need for organ donors. More than 100,000 people in the United States are currently waiting for lifesaving transplants, and living donation can cut that wait time significantly.
Today, Crew gets to be a regular two-year-old, and somewhere a donor carries the knowledge that they gave that gift.
Based on reporting by Google News - Cancer Survivor
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
Spread the positivity!
Share this good news with someone who needs it

