Mattel Agrees To Produce More Bald Barbie 'Ella' Dolls For Little Kids With Cancer

Mattel Agrees To Produce More Bald Barbie 'Ella' Dolls For Little Kids With Cancer
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Thanks to a brave little girl and her mother, Mattel will continue to make bald Barbie "Ella" dolls for children battling cancer.

The toy company produced a limited supply of the dolls after two women, Beckie Sypin and Jane Bingham, asked them to make bald Barbies in 2012. They started a Facebook movement for the cause, which gained over 100,000 ”likes” and ultimately succeeded: Mattel agreed to produce the bald dolls named “Ella” and distribute them to children's hospitals.

Grace Bumstead, who has a rare form of cancer called (ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukemia, received an Ella doll after her diagnosis last January. Her mother, Melissa Bumstead, told CBS that the doll helped 4-year-old Grace cope with her hair loss.

"We bring [Ella] along everywhere to say, ‘This is what’s happening. This is what’s happened to Ella. This is what’s gonna happen to you.’ It brought it to her level,” Bumstead told CBS.

But when Children’s Hospital Los Angeles told Bumstead that they gave Grace one of only six dolls they had in stock, she decided to ask the company for more. Following in Sypin and Bingham’s footsteps, she created a Change.org petition where she explained the cause:

I know how much this doll helped us bridge a very hard topic and I know how much this doll will be a special friend to our daughter once her hair falls out. Please help us ask Mattel to make more of these amazing Barbies. We'd like every chemotheraphy patient to have access to such an important and beautiful doll.

With more than 100,000 signatures -- the first 1,000 signed in just 10 minutes -- the family got Mattel's attention. They told Bumstead in May that they would make more Ella dolls for hospitals across the country.

We made the decision not to sell these dolls at retail stores and profit from them, but rather more directly and immediately get these into the hands of children who can most benefit from a play experience with these dolls. This decision demonstrates Mattel’s commitment to encourage play as a respite for children in the hospital and bring joy to children in need.

They plan to have the dolls ready by August, a win that Bumstead doesn't take for granted. “If the pain that we’re going through right now can help someone else, it makes it feel like it’s worth it,” she said.

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Before You Go

Ways To Teach Kids The Joy Of Giving
Donate toys(01 of07)
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Regularly go through their toys together for items they have outgrown or no longer love. Set aside the gently used ones (it's insulting to donate broken and battered things) and bring your children with you to deliver to the collection point. (credit:Alamy)
Hold donation birthday parties(02 of07)
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Ask guests to bring something simple for charity -- a book or small stuffed animal for instance -- rather than a gift for your child. Go as a family to a shelter, hospital or other place where these gifts will cheer up other children. (credit:Alamy)
Small gestures(03 of07)
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When you bake, make extras for an elderly neighbor. Shovel the driveway of the family next door with a new baby, or mow their lawn. Send cards and cookies to the troops. Draw pictures for the residents of the nearby retirement home. (credit:Alamy)
Be kind to animals(04 of07)
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Buy pet food and treats and bring your children with you when you deliver to the local shelter. (credit:Alamy)
Feed real people who are hungry(05 of07)
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Go as a family to the local food bank. They can not only watch where their canned donations go, but they can sweep and stack and meet the people who are served by their contributions. Or bring your kids along on a midnight run to deliver sandwiches to the homeless. (credit:Alamy)
Divide their allowance into "Spend" "Save" and "Give Away."(06 of07)
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Then, periodically, decide how to give it away together. (credit:Alamy)
Give blood(07 of07)
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They can't do this. But they can come along and wait while you do. They will like the cookies. (credit:Alamy)

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