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Anyone who would give their own kidney to save someone else鈥檚 life deserves a medal 鈥 in this case, the New York State Medal of Honor.
星空无限传媒鈥檚 Kidney Transplant Living Donor ceremony, held June 14 at Stony Brook University Hospital, celebrated kidney donors by offering them the statewide honor plus deep gratitude from their kidney transplant recipients. The ceremony marked transplant surgeries at Stony Brook from 2015 to 2017.
The medal was presented to 26 kidney donors by their recipients. Some met for the very first time that night.
SBUH鈥檚 kidney transplant program is the longest active transplant program on Long Island. The hospital鈥檚 first kidney transplant, in 1981, was a living donor transplant. Since then, there have been 1,808 adult and pediatric, living and deceased, kidney transplants at Stony Brook. The program has the highest transplant rate in the downstate New York area and is among the top 20 percent of programs nationally by patient volume.
Types of living donors include 鈥渓iving related鈥 (a biological relative), 鈥渓iving unrelated鈥 (such as a spouse or friend) and 鈥渁ltruistic鈥 鈥 someone who just wants to donate a kidney to anyone on the kidney transplant waiting list who is a match for the organ.
When altruistic donors give a kidney, they save the lives of patients waiting for a transplant. The average waiting time for the 115,000 people on the nationwide list is three to seven years. New York only ranks 50th out of 50 states in percentage of residents registered as organ donors, making the need for living donations even more urgent. According to the National Kidney Foundation, about 30 million Americans have chronic kidney disease and millions of others are at risk.
Richard Jones and Patrick Harris (Right) met for the first time at the ceremony, where they addressed the audience. Richard was an altruistic donor who wanted to find 鈥減eace and comfort鈥 through doing something good. Patrick waited four years on dialysis, before getting the phone call that summoned him to the hospital for a new kidney.
鈥淭hat phone call changed my life, and it changed his life as well,鈥 Patrick said. 鈥淚t gave us both a new beginning.鈥
Reflecting on his second chance at life, Patrick said, 鈥淭he big question for those of us who are recipients is 鈥 what are we going to do with our extended life? Don鈥檛 waste your gift.鈥
Turning to Richard, he said, 鈥淲ords could never express my gratitude to you.鈥 Then the men shook hands and hugged.
Chris Cook and Louise Graybosch were colleagues when Louise heard that Chris was ill with kidney disease. She thought long and hard about getting tested to see if one of her kidneys could be a match for him. After talking it over with her husband Gary, she began the screening process.
Stephen Knapik, RN, CPTC, Stony Brook鈥檚 Living Donor Program Coordinator, warned her that the process was rigorous. 鈥淗e told me, 鈥榊ou鈥檒l have more tests than an astronaut,鈥 鈥 Louise recalled.
Knapik pointed out at the ceremony that living donors actually save two lives 鈥 by donating a kidney to someone 鈥渁nd also by freeing up a kidney, from a deceased donor, that will go to a person on the transplant list.鈥
Transplant Surgeon Frank Darras, MD, Medical Director, Transplantation Services said although dialysis can be lifesaving for people with diseased kidneys, 鈥測ou can鈥檛 stay on it forever. And some people don鈥檛 do well on it.鈥
He and the rest of the Stony Brook transplantation team impress on living donors that what they鈥檙e doing should be given serious consideration. To that end, he said, potential donors undergo thorough medical and psychological evaluations.
鈥淲e explain to them that it鈥檚 a lot more than donating a pint of blood,鈥 he said. 鈥淓ven though the surgery is laparoscopic with small incisions, I鈥檓 just amazed every day that donors want to go ahead with it. They are truly remarkable people.鈥
In regards to altruistic living donation, the desire to meet face-to-face, whether it comes from a donor or recipient, is as individual as the people involved, said Dr. Darras. 鈥淭hey all have a story,鈥 he said. Donors may feel the need to see who their kidney is living in, and recipients often are curious about what sort of person would help somebody they don鈥檛 even know.
鈥淥nce they meet, with time they usually form some sort of connection,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey realize something has brought them together, whether it鈥檚 fate or something else.鈥
Said Dawn Francisquini, RN, CCTC, Administrator of Stony Brook鈥檚 Transplantation Service, 鈥淔or someone who gave the gift of a kidney, presenting them with a medal on this special night is Stony Brook鈥檚 way of giving back to the living donors. It鈥檚 the least we can do.鈥