Archive for the ‘ALTRUISTIC DONATION’ Category

‘My angel has come to visit’

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Story inspires woman to donate kidney to stranger

BY ANNA SUDAR • Advocate Reporter • May 10, 2010

NEWARK — Reese Alban had never met Donna Saalfield.

But that didn’t stop him from embracing her in a grateful hug when she came to his house.

“My angel has come to visit me today,” he said. “I finally get to meet our angel.”

Alban, of Newark, and Saalfield, of Heath, met for the first time April 29 to talk about the upcoming surgery that will change their lives.

Saalfield is donating one of her kidneys to Alban, giving him the chance to live a life without dialysis.

After months of testing, their surgery is scheduled for May 21 at Ohio State University Medical Center.

“I am just so humbled,” Alban said. “We are so thankful.”

Alban has been undergoing dialysis for end-stage renal disease for more than a year.

A native of Newark, Alban, 68, and his wife, Kaye, have spent most of their 46 years of marriage running The Sam Alban Co. on West Main Street. But they had to close the furniture store in 2008 when Alban’s health deteriorated.

Four years ago, he was diagnosed with high blood pressure. Doctors think he suffered from pulmonary hypertension.

His lungs became so weak he needed to use oxygen and inhalers. Medication eventually helped him get his hypertension and breathing under control, but his high blood pressure destroyed his kidneys.

In March 2009, he began dialysis at Choice One Renal Care in Newark, three times each week for four hours.

Although Alban dreamed of traveling with his wife, he had to stay close to Newark so he could go to dialysis. The treatments left him exhausted.

“When I’m on dialysis, it’s life but it’s not really living,” he said. “I come home and don’t really do much.”

Alban’s doctors suggested he consider a kidney transplant, but because of his age, he was only eligible for an organ from a live donor.

His wife and son, Matt, had health problems that made them ineligible to donate.

Friends and relatives offered to help, but none of them had the O positive blood type required to donate to Alban.

In early January, The Advocate published a story about Alban’s search for a compatible donor. Eighteen people contacted the Albans offering to donate.

One of those people was Donna Saalfield. The story caught her eye when she picked up her morning newspaper.

“I recently lost my dad, and that’s what brought me to Reese,” she said. “I thought of his family and how much it would mean to him to be able to spend time with them.”

A mother of three, Saalfield, 43, works as a sales representative for Commercial Electronics in Heath.

“I am a very family-oriented person,” she said. “(In the article) Reese talked about wanting to take his family to Put-in-Bay. That’s not to much to ask for someone who has been working his whole life.”

Saalfield called the Albans, then contacted the OSU Comprehensive Transplant Center to begin the process of donating.

It is possible to live with only one kidney but potential donors must go through rigorous medical testing, said Christine McGowan, a home dialysis nurse and transplant liaison at Choice One Renal Care.

“They have to get lots of testing done, blood work and a family history,” she said. “It’s so the recipient gets a good organ and the donor is not at risk. We don’t want more dialysis patients.”

Potential donors also have to meet with a psychologist, a social worker and a donor advocate, McGowan said.

In mid-April, Alban and Saalfield both got the good news: She is able to donate her kidney.

If all goes as planned, Alban and Saalfield will go into surgery at the same time in operating rooms that are across from each other so Saalfield’s kidney can be transplanted immediately, McGowan said.

Saalfield should be in the hospital only a few days and away from work for two to three weeks, McGowan said.

Although she will have several follow-up appointments to make sure she is healing, she will be able to go about her normal life soon after the surgery, she said.

Alban will spend about six days in the hospital and several weeks recovering. He will have to take anti-rejection medications for the rest of his life, but he won’t need dialysis, McGowan said.

“I hope both of us do well,” Saalfield said. “But I think we are going to be fine. I don’t have any regrets, and I don’t expect any.”

Although her children were nervous when she first told them about the transplant, Saalfield’s entire family is supporting her decision.

Her co-workers are covering her shifts at work so she can have the surgery.

“Before my dad died, he said he would never want to be on dialysis ever; it’s not the kind of life he wanted to live,” she said. “I am hoping this helps Reese a lot.”

Alban doesn’t have any big plans for after the transplant, but said he is excited to be able travel and relax.

“It will be my first true retirement,” he said. “I can kick back and do what I want to do.”

Alban and his wife plan to keep in touch with Saalfield and her family after the surgery is completed.

“We are just so thankful for Donna,” Kaye said. “I’m sure we will be friends. I feel like we already know her.”

McGowan said she sees a lot of her patients get donations from friends and acquaintances, but rarely from someone they’ve never met.

“It’s a little more unusual,” she said. “Living donation is a very wonderful thing, and those who donate are very special.

Although Alban is grateful to be getting a kidney, he knows there are many others who still are waiting for a donation.

Several of the people who couldn’t donate to him expressed interest in giving kidneys to others.

“I hope this encourages other people to donate,” he said.

Saalfield said she never realized how many people are in need of organs until she began the transplant process.

“When we went down to OSU to see the surgeon, my husband and daughter went with me and we were just amazed by all the people waiting for a transplant,” she said. “I hope other people try to do this; you are giving someone more of a life.”

Anna Sudar can be reached at (740) 328-8544 or asudar@newarkadvocate.com.

Experience: I gave my kidney to a stranger

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Experience: I gave my kidney to a stranger

To all intents and purposes I had a surplus organ – why shouldn’t I give it to someone who really needed it?

* Maggie Harris
* The Guardian, Saturday 15 May 2010

Experience: Maggie Harris

‘There was never any question of ­backing out, but I wondered if this was how young soldiers felt when called into ­battle. Christopher Thomond for the Guardian

I was at a dinner party six years ago when I decided I wanted to give my kidney to a stranger. Someone mentioned a friend who’d had a kidney transplant that had worked for a while, then been rejected. This man was back on dialysis, had become diabetic and lost his eyesight.

The rejected kidney had come from his brother and he was desperate to find another but had no other family members. I could see how awful this situation was – why should people be prepared to donate only to people they knew? At 60, I was a long-term blood donor and had always enjoyed good health. There was no history of kidney disease in my family, and I couldn’t imagine either of my daughters – then in their early 20s – needing a transplant. On average, a healthy kidney from a live donor gives the recipient an extra 15 years’ life expectancy, free from dialysis, and to all intents and purposes I had a surplus organ – why shouldn’t I give it to someone who really needed it?

Except it wasn’t that easy. At that point, I discovered, only family members or close friends could be considered. But there was an expectation the law would soon change and I went to my GP, who referred me to a hospital with a transplant unit. I later received a call from the coordinator nurse, who pretty much told me to forget it.

But I didn’t forget it. One of our neighbors is a professor of medical ethics, who put me in touch with a surgeon who was prepared to take me seriously. I underwent a series of physical and psychological tests. The psychiatrist wanted to get to the bottom of why I wanted to donate to a stranger. What were my expectations? Would I suffer a sense of anticlimax afterward and become depressed? Was I doing it to try to solve some sort of crisis in my own life? I understood the need for this, but had no ulterior motive, beyond the expectation of feeling “good” about helping someone.

She also wanted to know whether I’d told friends, and what my family thought. My husband and children had been quite taken aback, but saw I was determined to go ahead and respected my wishes. On the other hand, I found the attitude of some of my friends shocking and hurtful. One implied it was “wrong”, despite failing to explain why. Another sourly described me as a “secular saint – St Margaret of the One Kidney”. I’d never suggest a healthy person has a moral obligation to give up a kidney, but I can’t help thinking these friends saw my act as a “challenge”, one they couldn’t – or wouldn’t – rise to, and that they felt angry and resentful as a result.

Soon after my tests, the Human Tissue Act finally made altruistic donation possible by 2006. The following year, I learned a matching recipient had been found for my kidney. With a date set for the operation, the reality of what I was doing became less abstract and I started to feel a bit queasy. There was never any question of backing out, but I wondered if this was how young soldiers felt when called into battle. I had a couple of months of increasing unease, of waking in the night thinking, “What if…?”

Actually, the risk was minimal – no one in this country has died as a direct result of having a kidney removed. All the same, it wasn’t easy – I was working as a teacher, and had to take seven weeks off. Both my daughters were born by caesarean section, and I’d expected similar pain and discomfort, but I wasn’t prepared for the severe nausea that often kept me bed-bound.

The operation was a success, but I’ve never had any contact with the recipient and know very little about him. I’m thankful for that – it would be an awkward, artificial relationship, and I don’t want anyone feeling beholden to me. I’m also protected against potential disappointment. What if he turned out to be a member of the BNP, or Mark Thatcher?

Giving your kidney to a complete stranger is still rare – so far, only 25 volunteers have been approved. But more than two years on, I feel every bit as healthy with one kidney as I did with two. I’ve had no sense of anticlimax, nor am I wandering around in a haze of self-satisfaction, but I do feel good about what I’ve done. We live in an unfair world, where health and happiness aren’t evenly distributed, and I’ve had more than my fair share. My act was simply to redress the balance a little.

As told to Chris Broughton

Kidney donor felt called

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Woman responds to prayer request of ailing parishioner
Friday, May 14, 2010 2:52 AM
By Gail Martineau

Vonden Sparks, left, received a kidney from Terry Meade. Both are members of New Albany United Methodist Church.

Vonden Sparks, left, received a kidney from Terry Meade. Both are members of New Albany United Methodist Church.
|

Vonden Sparks and Terry Meade have a spiritual and physical bond that will last the rest of their lives.

Both are members of New Albany United Methodist Church, but they barely knew each other until August — when Meade donated a kidney to Sparks.

Now, they consider each other family.

Before the transplant, Sparks had end-stage renal disease, the result of a long battle with diabetes. He’d been on the waiting list for a kidney transplant for two years.

The only thing keeping him alive – aside from faith and a sense of humor, he said – was frequent dialysis, and that couldn’t continue indefinitely.

The Johnstown resident, now 56, was just about out of options when he appealed to his congregation in a prayer request last year.

“The congregation has so many connections,” said Nancy Goulet, head pastor at New Albany United Methodist. “We didn’t know if any of them individually would be able to help.”

Meade said that as soon as she heard the prayer request, she felt called to help Sparks.

“God decided this whole event,” said Meade, 64. “I would have never done it in any other event.”

Meade, who lives in Westerville, went through about five months of physical and mental examinations at Ohio State University Medical Center to determine whether she would be a suitable donor for Sparks.

“I’ve been tested from the tip of my toes to the top of my head,” she said, laughing.

Sparks was thrilled when he received word that a donor had been identified. He was amazed when he found out who it was.

“She contacted me about two weeks before the surgery and said that we’ve got a surgery date,” he said. “I was totally shocked.”

Goulet, on the other hand, said she wasn’t surprised.

Meade, the pastor said, is “one always wanting to do for others.”

“That’s just her nature,” Goulet said. “It just warms my heart to know that people take their faith so seriously and that they are willing to give a part of themselves – literally.”

Meade said the experience has made her a believer in organ donation.

“I would do it again in a heartbeat if I had double of everything,” she said. “It only really hurt for about 12 hours.”

Helping Sparks, she said, has changed her life.

“The change isn’t physical, it’s more mental and spiritual,” she said. “Knowing I’ve given him the ability to enjoy life a little longer – it’s hard to put it into words. It’s a feeling of true fulfillment.”

Sparks said he hopes others follow Meade’s example. If nothing else, he said, people should arrange to donate their organs upon death.

“I think it’s a shame that people pass away and are buried with organs,” he said. “Why not give the gift of life to someone who needs it? There is no reason for anyone to die for lack of an organ.”

Sparks and Meade, who in the past might have exchanged greetings every other Sunday, now sit through church services with their arms around each other.

“She’s a sister now,” Sparks said. “That’s just the way it goes. You develop a relationship with the person who gives you life. If it wasn’t for them, you’d be dead or having a life of dialysis.

“It makes you feel real good about where you go to church.”

gmartineau@thisweeknews.com

How to Be a Hero in One Easy Step

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

Cari Shane Parven

Washington D.C. based writer
Posted: April 29, 2010 03:09 PM

Six years ago this month, Lisa Peabody’s fourth child, her toddler, passed away. She was only 15-months-old. 63 days earlier, at the age of 13 months, Caroline was diagnosed with a brain tumor.

Caroline passed out of the Peabody’s lives but then, almost miraculously, into the lives of strangers.

“Every day while I sat there with her, hoping and hoping and hoping,” says Lisa Peabody, of Bethesda, Maryland, recalling her days in the ICU with her rosy-cheeked, blonde and blue-eyed baby, “everyday the bells would ring and the beepers would go off and the nurses and doctors would shoo me out … I learned every day that so many of these children were losing a life because they needed an organ, they needed a kidney, they needed a liver, they needed a heart. And I just couldn’t believe that people weren’t giving. Why weren’t people helping while I was watching these babies die?” Peabody says, incredulous, wiping tears from her eyes.

Even as their own child died, it ultimately wasn’t a hard decision for Lisa and her husband, Chris, as they began to discuss organ donation.

“Can’t we do something good … can’t we help someone?” they asked each other. “We can’t be helped,” Peabody remembers telling her husband, [but] she has a whole body filled with working pieces.”

A tiny little hero, standing no more than two-and-a-half feet tall, Caroline saved many lives. By donating her pulmonary arties, she saved the life of a child in grave need of a transplant. Caroline’s heart values, too, saved the life of yet another child. And, still Caroline gave the gift of sight to two more people by donating her corneas. “And I’m very proud to say we helped some other families out there, very proud,” Peabody concludes on a video she made and uploaded to YouTube as part of a donor organ awareness campaign produced by the Washington Regional Transplant Community (WRTC). Each day in April, Organ Donation Awareness Month (designated in 2003), 30 Days, 30 Stories, features the emotional story of donor families, recipients and even those who lost loved ones because there was no donation.

DeShawn McMillan of Fort Washington, Maryland lost her mother because some one failed to donate a liver. “If you think about how many people there are in the world … [yet] we have so many people that are on a waiting list and I think if you just make a conscious decision of signing up to be an organ donor, we can all give something to each other.”

Facts:

18 people die every day, due to the lack of organs available for transplant.

Every 11 minutes, a new name is added to the national list.

The average wait for a kidney transplant is 5 years.2010-04-29-images.jpeg

“Being an organ donor doesn’t cost money, doesn’t cost time, doesn’t take practice, all the excuses and challenges that we always associate with things,” says Kati Penney of Bethesda, Maryland whose daughter Katrina, now in first grade, received a heart donation at the age of 9 months. “Organ donation [is] really just making a decision.”

While WRTC’s 30 Days, 30 Stories campaign is a DC Metro Area (Maryland, Virginia, DC) project, the power of the world wide web has taken this small but emotional project nationwide, even international, because of the powerful on-line site, YouTube.

Organ donation is a relatively new phenomenon. The first successful transplant was a kidney transplant from a live donor performed in 1954. But according to John Ogden, Senior Public Affairs Associate for WRTC, the first donation by a deceased person was performed in 1962, also a kidney transplant. It would be 10 years before the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act established the donor card which no longer exists, though undoubtedly there are those with that card still in their wallets.

By the late 70s, state-run organ donation programs began cultivating relationships with their individual state motor vehicles departments. Currently, every state in the country but Vermont, has a relationship with their DMV which will automatically ask every registering motorist if s/he will register as an organ donator.

Within the past four years, state donation organizations have begun working together, and the efforts have paid off according to Ogden. There is a now a national on-line registry, www.donatelife.net with links to each individual state-run donor organization in all 50 states.

The new, group-effort is paying off. Currently, 86.3-million people are registered donors in the United States, that’s 37.1-percent of all U.S. residents over the age of 18, a 24.4-percent increase since 2007, with an 8-percent-plus increase between 2008 and 2009 alone. In the past three years, Donate Life America says there have been 82-thousand organ transplants, approximately 120-thousand cornea transplants and millions of tissue transplants.

“Briana is … is the unsung hero who gave Katrina her heart,” says Penney who after the transplant sent bi-yearly photos of her own daughter to Briana’s mother. Finally, “we received a letter from [Briana's] mother who talked to us about how it has taken her a bit of time to heal. But each year as she receives the cards and letters from us and looks through Katrina’s pictures, it makes it a little easier to know that there’s another little girl who is out there and is blessed because of Briana.”

Kat Clifford of Herndon, Virginia lost her daughter Kylie only three months after Kylie’s birth. Her decision to donate her daughter’s organs “took probably three minutes. Kylie was gone we couldn’t get her back but could we give someone else something? Yes,” says Clifford on her WRTC produced, YouTube video.

“In such a time of tragedy and loss looking back [donor families are] able to see the donation as some sort of silver lining,” says Ogden. “Nothing is ever going to bring your loved one back, but to know that there are people out there living and breathing today literally because of your loved one. That is an experience that very few people actually have but organ and tissue donor family members.”

“Every recipient will tell you the call is an incredible moment in their lives that they will never forget, says Kathryn Turner of Bethesda, Maryland who is alive today because of a much needed liver transplant. “It was a moment of terror, joy and deep sadness because I knew that someone had lost someone they dearly loved… This made me a tremendously kinder, gentler patient person and I look for ways to do something to help someone else. I write my donor family several times a year, just to let them know how much I appreciate this gift, how much I care about them, how much I respect and love their loved one and how I try to keep my body healthy to preserve what has been given to me,” says Turner on day 28 of the 30 Days, 30 Stories video.

“I feel as if the gift of life I’ve been given by this young lady, I was given for a reason,” says James Selby of Capitol Heights, Maryland who received a heart and kidney from a 17-year-old victim of a motorcycle accident. He believes he was given the gift of life “so that I could live on and … be productive for the both of us.”

Facts, right and wrong:
• A majority of U.S. adults now wish to be organ or tissue donors: 56% up from 50% a year ago.
• 75% of those surveyed want their donation wishes fulfilled regardless of family desires.
• 52% of people incorrectly believe that doctors may not try as hard to save their lives if they know they are registered organ or tissue donors.
• 19% of people are not sure they would be acceptable donors.
• 48% of people incorrectly believe a black market exists in the U.S. for organs and tissue, up from 44% in 2009.
• 16% of people incorrectly believe a regular funeral is not possible following donation, this percentage is up from 13% in 2004.
• 61% mistakenly believe it is possible for a brain dead person to recover from his or her injuries.

Woman offers kidney to save stranger’s life

Monday, April 26th, 2010

NZPA April 17, 2010, 8:52 am

A Taranaki woman has offered to save a complete stranger’s life by giving her one of her kidneys.

Hillary Kieft, 38, and Celese Mottram, 33, met by chance on a New Plymouth street in May last year, The Taranaki Daily News reported.

Mrs Mottram was on dialysis after contracting a disease that destroyed her kidneys after the birth of her daughter Maddison in March 2006.

The mother of four gave up hope after doctors told her that she would need a transplant.

Mrs Mottram said she thought it was a joke when Mrs Kieft, a born-again Christian, suggested she might be a donor.

Mrs Kieft then contacted Mrs Mottram six weeks later to offer her a kidney.

She said their meeting was “a divine appointment”.

“I live by faith, my love is Jesus Christ and he overcomes a lot.”

Mrs Mottram said it was an incredible thing for a stranger to do.

However, the transplant process did not move fast enough and Mrs Mottram had to have her left foot and ankle amputated six weeks ago because of complications with her dialysis.
The pair still have not been told by the transplant team if they were a match.

Woman appeals for kidney donor

Monday, April 26th, 2010

HEALTH: Incentives available to anyone willing
Posted By HAROLD CARMICHAEL THE SUDBURY STAR
Posted 10 days ago

Andrea Shea Hudson has lived with Type 1 diabetes since the age of four.

Now, at age 45, her kidneys have shut down, she is on an insulin pump and has started dialysis treatments.

What would give the Lively woman back her life is a kidney transplant. She can’t wait for a cadaver transplant, which could take up to five years, since there’s 21,000-person waiting list in Canada.

Instead, she needs one from a live donor that could be transplanted and functioning in rapid fashion.

“My kidneys don’t work any more,” she said Thursday, at a press conference at Tom Davies Square, where she launched a public drive to find a live donor.

“I feel like a Christmas turkey. I have two litres of (extra) fluid in me. (But) my kidneys, in fact, lasted quite a long time.”

A life strategy coach by profession, Shea Hudson is hoping to be matched with a person under the age of 60 of any blood type. That’s because she has AB-blood and, consequently, is a universal recipient for an organ donation.

Shea Hudson has the backing of a local group that formed to get the word out about her donor kidney search and to raise $25,000 for the costs associated with the operation.

The group’s website is www.lifesavingdonation.com.

What makes the public appeal unique is that incentives are being offered for the living donor’s family and the person’s employer as a means to both thank and support them following the transplant.

As the kidney donor would likely be off work one month, the group is looking to help the donor’s family through a number of measures, such as movie passes and meals out, while helping the donor’s employer through things such as employee training and marketing help.

“We are here today to let people know we need to find that one person who says ‘I want to donate a kidney,’ ” said friend Dawn Larsen, who is helping to spearhead the group.

“We will not stop looking until we find someone.”

Ward 7 Coun. Russ Thompson, who received a cadaver kidney in 1994 after undergoing three years of dialysis, said the transplant gave him his life back.

“I kind of felt I lost three, four years of my life because of it,” he said at the press conference.

“It was a tough thing to endure. The transplant, it was the ultimate gift. It returns you to a normal lifestyle again. Your quality of life is back. You feel more productive.”

National Organ and Tissue Donation Awareness Week is April 18-25.

hcarmichael@thesudburystar.com

Man donates kidney to Lafayette woman

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Man donates kidney to Lafayette woman

Updated: Monday, 26 Apr 2010, 11:01 AM EDT
Published : Sunday, 25 Apr 2010, 5:01 PM EDT

LAFAYETTE, Ind. (WLFI) – April is the national Donate Life Month. One Lafayette woman’s life was changed after someone she never even met donated his kidney to her.

Two strangers, one kidney, one saved life: that’s the story of Adam Bridge and Sandy Watts. It all started when 24-year-old Flora resident Adam Bridge stopped at a gas station in Rossville and saw a sign saying Watts was looking for a kidney donor with an O-positive blood type.

“They say the O-positive blood type is rare,” said Watts.

“I called and inquired, you know, and I thought about it for a day or so, and kind of walked into that position. If I were tied to a machine like that I would want somebody to step up for me,” said Bridge.

So, Bridge stepped up for someone who had been a perfect stranger to him.

“I’ll give somebody my kidney, I’ll give somebody that better quality of life,” said Bridge.

Watts said her health problems began long ago and have continued to get worse over the years.

“I delivered my daughter in 1981 and I got toxemia when I delivered her and my kidneys shut down then and I’ve been sick ever since,” said Watts.

Her last hope to feel better was to find a kidney donor.

“I was sick and tired of being sick and tired all the time. I have a 5-year-old grandbaby and you know he likes to play basketball and I couldn’t do it. And, he said, ‘Granny, Jesus isn’t going to let you die, he’s going to give you a kidney,’” said Watts.

In February, Bridge and Watts waited in separate hospital rooms and both underwent successful surgeries.

“The surgery, from what I was told, was about two hours. I have maybe four very small incisions,” said Bridge.

That’s a small price to pay for saving a life Bridge said.

“He’s my hero, and I love him dearly,” said Watts.

Now the two strangers will be connected in some way for life.

“He’s like the son I never had. We’re very close. His family is my family now,” said Watts.

Both Watts and Bridge hope others can donate as well.

“Put yourself in that position of someone on dialysis and think about their quality of life that they have and then think if you want to do it. If your heart’s in the right spot do it,” said Bridge.

“There’s people out there dying and you can save their life and that’s got to be a wonderful thing. Adam said I’m so glad I can do this for you. And, I say I am so glad you did this for me,” said Watts.

Kidney donor has heart to spare

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Posted: April 25, 2010 |(

Most of us like to think we’d give a kidney to a family member or close friend who needed one. Maybe even to a co-worker or someone from church.

Sherry Reischel of West Bend offered one of hers to anyone at all who might require it.

And on Tuesday, that kidney was transplanted into a 72-year-old retired autoworker from Toledo, Ohio, named Louie Sudeth. He was a stranger to Sherry but certainly isn’t anymore.

He sobbed when he talked about her. “It takes a person with a lot of love to do what she did. She’s added years to my life. I’ve got part of her inside of me now.”

The best news is that Sherry’s donation is causing a chain reaction of donors and recipients, all of them strangers to each other.

This story starts a couple years ago when Sherry, 62, a kindergarten aide at Green Tree School in West Bend, was watching “ABC World News” as she washed the dishes.

They had a story about something called kidney paired donations. Here’s how it works: Let’s say I needed a kidney and a friend wanted to give one to me. Unfortunately, that friend was not a compatible donor. As a pair, we’d be entered into a computer. Eventually, I would receive a kidney from a stranger and my willing donor would give one to someone else.

What makes Sherry’s gesture so generous is that she was not paired with a recipient whom she knows or loves. She contacted the Alliance for Paired Donation at the University of Toledo and offered to start a new chain with nothing to be gained for any friend or family member of hers.

“It just drew me,” she said in a phone conversation from her bed at the university’s medical center, where she was recovering from the surgery one day earlier.

“I thought, ‘How great is that, that you can actually do it when you’re alive and help people.’ Studies have shown that a cadaver kidney works for an average of eight and a half years. With a live kidney, you can double that. I thought, ‘Hey, I might as well get in on the celebration of it while I’m here.’ ”
Extending the chain

Louie has a friend who was willing to give a kidney to him, but she was not compatible. So her kidney was matched to a man in Greece. Some complications have arisen in making that international exchange a reality, which is unfortunate because that man’s wife is a match for a Texas man, who has a sister-in-law willing to keep the chain going.

Michael Rees was the transplant surgeon for Sherry and Louie. He directs the Alliance for Paired Donation. The Web site is paireddonation.org.

Rees uses the word altruism to describe Sherry’s selfless act.

“This is such a remarkable thing for someone to do,” he said. “This chain never would have started without Sherry. What she did can help 10 or 20 or maybe 100 people if we can keep the chain going.”

In the past decade, paired donation has resulted in about 800 kidney transplants in the United States. At the moment, the alliance has eight chains moving forward, and 30 people have received transplants through these chains, Rees said. Froedtert Hospital has signed on to the program and last week learned that a donor from Alabama is a match with a Wisconsin person needing a kidney.

The waiting list for kidneys in America is huge, about 85,000 people.

“We’d like to see paired donation become so big that we could see the list start to shrink,” Rees said.

For Sherry, this is all about paying it forward. She and her husband, Robert, drove to Toledo. Their travel and medical expenses were covered.

“I’ve been very blessed. We’ve been married for 41 years, and we have four beautiful children and 10-plus grandchildren. I’ve just always been healthy and came from a kind, caring family. That’s how we grew up, that you help people out who need help. So it didn’t take a lot of decision on my part,” she said.

By chance, Sherry and Louie ran into each other in a hospital waiting room before the surgery. They got to talking, and when they exchanged a few details they realized they were donor and recipient. Louie leaped to his feet and gave her a bear hug. He told her he was raised on a farm in Wisconsin, near Pembine, and that he moved to Ohio after the Navy to work in a plant that built Chevrolet transmissions.

Louie said he’s had kidney trouble for 10 years and was on dialysis for seven months. The people at his church have been praying for a donor, and Louie likes to quote Proverbs to help explain what happened here: “When you strive to do my will, I will add days and years to your life.”

Sherry’s kidney started working immediately inside Louie, he said. He’s feeling great and thankful beyond words.

Sherry’s daughter, Jessica Hartjes from Appleton, and granddaughter Macy were present in the hospital room when Sherry and Louie visited for the first time after surgery. Louie’s wife and family were there, too. The two patients held hands. They both said they plan to stay in touch and become like family.

Jessica said that when Sherry left the room, Louie called after her. “I love you,” he said.

Living on dialysis, waiting for a kidney

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Terrace Standard

By Margaret Speirs – Terrace Standard

Published: March 23, 2010 11:00 PM
Updated: March 24, 2010 9:31 AM

Donell Steele places large bags of clear fluid on her bed, puts on gloves and wipes down the bags.

She takes other bags from a box in one corner of her bedroom that contain sterile tubes.

One end of each tube goes into her dialysis machine, sitting on a nightstand next to her bed, and the other end attaches onto a short tube on one of the bags on her bed.

The bags are placed on a shelf under the dialysis machine and now Steele’s ready for her nightly kidney dialysis that pumps liquid into her abdomen.

This liquid collects the wastes in her body, and when drained, cleans them out in place of what her kidneys would normally do, but have stopped doing since her transplanted kidney failed last year.

This is peritoneal kidney dialysis, which Steele sets up for eight hours every night as she sleeps.

Steele has Familial Juvenile Nephronophthisis, a genetic disorder in which both kidneys fail slowly, starting from a young age. At age 15, Steele began to feel tired and developed headaches that wouldn’t go away.

Doctors found she was anemic and put her on iron supplements but after a month, nothing had changed.

Tests determined she not only had kidney disease but that her kidney function was only about 17 per cent of normal – so bad doctors could not believe she was still functioning.

Steele started doing peritoneal dialysis at home as there wasn’t any hemodialysis clinic at the hospital here at that time.

For peritoneal dialysis, the inside of the abdomen—the peritoneal cavity—is filled with a special dialysis fluid that looks like water.

This exposes blood vessels in the peritoneum to the fluid. The peritoneum functions just like the artificial membrane in a dialyzer.

Excess water and wastes pass from the blood through the peritoneum into the dialysis fluid. The fluid is then drained from the body and discarded.

Steele did dialysis for two years and then her dad donated a kidney to her in June 1997, and it lasted for 12-1/2 years before it stopped working in February 2009.

The wait for a kidney transplant can be as long as seven years, depending on blood type. Steele is Type O, which is the best blood type for a donor but not for a recipient.

A Type O donor can give to almost any recipient: Type O, A, B or AB. A Type O recipient can only get a kidney from a Type O donor.

However, a donor and recipient could have the same blood type but not be a good match because antibodies can be present in the recipient’s blood that can attack the transplanted kidney, even with medication.

A kidney from a live person matches better, will have minimal or no damage and will last longer for the recipient.

A new form of donation is paired kidney exchange, which could allow Steele’s husband to give a kidney to someone else so she can get a kidney in return.

Steele and her husband have different blood types so he cannot donate to her; but if there’s another donor/recipient pair who have the same problem, the two pairs can help each other.

In the meantime, her family has begun a support group for people to come together, make friends and help with education about kidney disease, dialysis, transplants and donation.

Give a kidney, save several lives

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Posted: Monday, Mar 22, 2010 – 04:07:02 pm PDT
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By Candice Boutilier
Herald assistant editor
Candice Boutilier

I recently read a story about the need for kidney transplants and how people are getting them through a unique process.

Although I do not need a kidney transplant, nor do I know anyone who does, I was compelled to read the story because it indicated that one woman managed to save several lives, so it made me curious and I read on.

She saved more than 10 people’s lives by initiating a chain of kidney transplants with her single kidney donation.

It’s described as a donation chain and could possibly make it easier for the thousands of near death people to get a kidney transplant and a second chance at life.

Some of us know someone who needs a kidney transplant.

Many of us would give our own kidney to save our mother’s life, our father’s life, a friend’s life, or even a total stranger’s life. But no matter how easily you would give up a piece of your body to save someone you love, you still have to be a match in order for the transplant to be a success.

Most of the time, people are not a match to their loved ones and they remain on a donation list.

A solution to this problem is almost like trading kidneys.

Someone knows someone who needs a kidney transplant but they are not a match, but you might be a match for someone else who needs a kidney transplant. And that person might know someone who is willing to donate a kidney to your loved one in exchange for a kidney for their loved one.

That’s how it works.

Seems like a simple solution.

As I was reading this article on the treadmill and tearing up in public, I felt compelled to give away a kidney even though I don’t know anyone who needs one.

Giving someone a second chance at life seems like the best thing anyone can do for someone. Even if it is a stranger. Not only are their lives extended, all the people around them are enriched because they get to have the person they love a lot longer than expected.

So really, this kidney chain donation process not only saves lives, but it improves the lives of so many other people the donor may never know.

That must be a great feeling.

What excited me the most about this chain idea, is that is seems like people would no longer have to be on long waiting lists wondering if they will get to live or not.

Candice Boutilier is the assistant editor for the Columbia Basin Herald.