O.C. Grandma - JoAnne Needs a Kidney

O.C. Grandma - JoAnne Needs a Kidney To learn more about my story, click the link below.

Having been diagnosed with Stage 3, Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) 9 years ago, my kidney function is almost at Stage 5, End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD), which means dialysis or kidney transplant.

Two years have gone by since I first started looking for "my person" who would be eligible to donate a kidney to me.  Fo...
07/17/2023

Two years have gone by since I first started looking for "my person" who would be eligible to donate a kidney to me. Fortunately I have not yet had to go on dialysis but this past June my numbers slipped into Stage 5. This awakened me to the fact that all is not completely as it should be and something could happen at any time. Luckily THIS month after another blood test, my numbers went up enough to put me back in Stage 4, but I really need to get on top of my program. At some point, because of my age, I will be too old for any kind of transplant. So if there is anyone who had been thinking of being a donor and would like to read up on this, please take time to read the book listed below.
You can still check my site out at: WWW.NKR.ORG/RZG392
This site, I hope, will be updated in the next 3 months.

"The Insider's Guide to Living Kidney Donation: Everything You Need to Know If You Give (or Get) the Greatest Gift" offers nontechnical information and practical advice, and the multifaceted guidance that potential and past donors and kidney patients need. The book explains what to expect before and...

Another interesting story about being signed us as a donor after you die.  I am STILL actively looking for a Living Kidn...
05/27/2022

Another interesting story about being signed us as a donor after you die. I am STILL actively looking for a Living Kidney Donor/
WWW.NKR.ORG/RZG392

The oldest organ donor is U.S. history was 95 years old. In 2021, donor Cecil was able to save a woman’s life with the donation of his liver and helped enhance the lives of more than 20 people. Read more about Cecil’s life, and the generosity his gifts: https://www.organdonor.gov/learn/life-stories/record-breaking-organ-donor-proves-age-no-limit

05/04/2022

I know that everyone is not meant to be a Living Organ Donor but have you considered being an organ donor after you die? Do you know how many people you could help or how it would help move people up the list who are waiting for a transplant?

The story below BE A DONOR is a persuasive speech written by Kathy Schmelzle in April 2003.

On April 19, 2005, the unthinkable happened; Kathy died in a motorcycle/tractor accident about a half mile from her home. Kathy’s decision about organ donation was honored and she became a donor: the very thing she felt so strongly about was now hers. Her parents will tell you, there is no way to describe the pain of losing a child. There is also no way to describe the awe in realizing how many lives your child has touched while alive and through donation.

Step up and be someone’s hero. Say YES!

BE A DONOR by Kathy Schmelzle

Recently, my uncle Wally died very unexpectedly. He was the type of person who never showed emotion to something negative that bothered him. My mom has said several times, "He was the wealthiest man with friends, but he just didn't know it." I have heard this numerous times within the past month and a half. His death made my family and I understand what is meant by the expression, “It took my breath away.” With his death, over 50 different people were helped. How was this possible you may ask? It was possible because my mother made the decision of donating Wally’s organs. She donated everything she could so that something good could come out of the tragedy. Among the organs she donated were bone and connective tissue, blood vessels, skin and the corneas of both eyes.

People die every day, sometimes very unexpectedly. Have you ever thought about being an organ donor? Personally, I have thought of this quite a bit lately. There are so many people; parents, grandparents and children who wait on a list for months, maybe years, to receive a donated organ so that they can live. According to the State Government News, more than 56,000 people (NOW OVER 100,000) are waiting on this list for a healthy lung, heart, kidney or other organs. Also, according to the same source, each year 4,000 people waiting on these lists die because there are not enough organs donated. This figure was given in 1998 and the list keeps getting larger and larger. According to the National Kidney Foundation, nearly 3,000 people are added to the list each month!

According to the National Kidney Foundation, 10,000 to 14,000 people die each year who would have met the criteria for an organ donor. The sad thing is that less than half of these people are willing to donate or haven’t taken the time to think of it. Throughout this speech, I plan to persuade you to, at least, think about becoming an organ donor. I will explain the benefits of becoming a donor, how the organs are used to help others and how you can become a donor.

First of all, there are benefits of becoming an organ or tissue donor. The strongest benefit of being an organ donor is the fact that people's lives can be saved with the donations.
Just think, you could help over 50 people like my uncle did. Yes, his death was unexpected, but in my opinion, everyone should have the chance to live like everyone else, no matter if they are sick. Some children are born with an illness and never have the chance to live a normal life because of the shortage of organ donors. These children may not be able to experience going on their first date, playing football or basketball for school or even enjoying the simple everyday life with friends.

Each organ has a use in donating. The corneas of the eyes help restore vision of nearly everyone who has reduced eyesight. Usually, if both of the corneas of the eyes are donated, they will go to two separate people. According to the Heartland Lions Eye Banks, over 50,000 individuals worldwide restore their vision after undergoing corneal transplant surgery. My grandpa can see today because of a transplanted cornea. The sclera, which is the white part of the eye, is also used to rebuild eardrums in surgeries that restores up to 90% of hearing.
The skin tissue is used to help burn victims. Bones donated are used for bones damaged by tumors, traumas and infections. This would save limbs from being amputated. The organs transplanted are the heart, lungs, liver, pancreas, kidneys and small intestines. There are also the donations of heart valves and blood vessels.

With the transplant of the heart, anyone can receive another human’s heart by meeting two major criteria. The blood type has to match and the size of the heart needs to be similar from donor to receiver. For example, Gene Schraad got sick in 1989 and was told his heart was deteriorating. In 1996, he went into cardiac arrest while in a field. He was taken to the hospital and his heart was beating 300 beats per minute. He wasn’t expected to live. He was life stared [life-flighted] to Topeka and they put a defibrillator in his heart which shocked him each time his heart was beating too fast or too slow. Within 4 years, he had 50 shocks. In January of 2000, a doctor told him he needed a heart transplant.

Gene was in the hospital for 4 and a half months waiting for a heart. On May 7th, 2000, three nurses entered his hospital room and told him he had a heart waiting for him. He said he was happy and glad but yet scared, not for the operation, but worried that his body would reject the heart. He said “My life was in the Good Lord’s Hands.”

After a heart transplant, the normal time for a person to stay in the hospital is a week. However, Gene stayed two weeks because the heart he received was smaller than the one they removed. The empty space that the heart didn’t occupy filled up with fluid. They removed 2 liters of fluid from around his heart. Since then he has had very few rejection problems. On May 7th, it will be 3 years since Gene received his heart. Today Gene lives a normal life because someone was willing to give the gift of life.

Once a person decides to be an organ donor, there are many ways to accomplish this. You can sign the donor card when you receive your driver's license and the “donor” sticker will be placed on the back. Some of you may have already done this. I know I have. It is really pointless though unless you talk to your family. Your driver’s license doesn’t add you to any kind of registry. Kansas has a donor registry list and you can be added to this list by contacting the Midwest Transplant Network, Kansas Donor Registry. If you haven’t added it to your driver’s license, now is the time to think about it. Even though you do this, your family has the last say in whether you are a donor or not. So, it is very important to let your family know what your wishes are so they can be carried out. It’s an important thing to be thinking of, even while in high school. Children should talk to their parents about this. Donors are greatly needed, especially for teenagers.

Telling your family that you would like to be an organ donor might not be easy. It may seem that talking of death is morbid, but it’s really about giving life. Some families might not believe in it or don’t take the time to think about it. You should explain to them that you will be giving over 50 people a second chance at living. No donations are taken until the next of kin or immediate family signs a release or consent form. They can choose certain organs or all that can be used. For instance, they can donate only your eyes if they desire. Also, donations can help people suffering from organ failures, blindness, burns, bone and heart defects. Another good idea is to have your family learn more about organ and tissue donations. (FROM NATIONAL KIDNEY FOUNDATION OR YOUR LOCAL TRANSPLANT CENTER).

In conclusion, (KATHY STATED), I really hope I have persuaded you how important it is in becoming an organ donor by explaining the benefits of becoming one, how the organs are used and also how you can become a donor. I also hope that I have persuaded you to talk to your parents or loved ones and let them know your wishes. The wishes that I, Kathy, want fulfilled are told in the poem by Robert N. Test titled To Remember Me.

I, JOANNE, ALREADY POSTED THIS POEM ON MY PAGE AND FEED LAST WEEK. AGAIN MY OWN PERSONAL😀SITE IS AT: WWW.NKR.ORG/RZG392, IF YOU HAVEN'T READ IT YET. REMEMBER, MY STORY, WAS WRITTEN ALMOST 11 MONTHS AGO AND I AM STILL LOOKING FOR MY LIVING KIDNEY DONOR! IT IS NOT AS EASY TO FIND THAT "RIGHT" PERSON AND THAT'S WHY SO MANY ARE ON THE WAITING LIST.

04/24/2022

MedStar Georgetown Transplant Center is my choice as well, should I find a living kidney donor. There are 3 types of being a donor and you do not have to be in the same state: dedicated (to a certain person); paired exchange; and non-dedicated (or altruistic). Please watch their story!

Address

Bridgeville, DE
19933

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