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A seven year-old boy from California, Nicholas Green, was killed by highway robbers in 1994
while vacationing in Italy with his family. His parents agreed to donate his
organs and corneas, which went to seven Italians waiting for transplants. Reg and Maggie
Green spoke openly to the media, with no bitterness, about their loss and
decision. The world took the story--and the Greens--to its heart. Organ donations in
Italy have tripled since Nicholas was killed so that thousands of people are alive who would
have died.
The world's response to the Green's personal tragedy is called "the Nicholas
effect." No matter their nationality or calling, people respond from the
heart--presidents, movie stars, schoolchildren, grandmothers, Boy scouts,
soccer players, surgeons, and organ recipients. Organ donor cards are
signed. Poems are written, pictures painted, parks dedicated, scholarships
established, medals given, children hugged.
Reg Green’s New Book
The Gift that Heals, a new book by Reg Green, tells the stories of 42 families at almost every stage
of the transplantation process. Some are recipients, among them, a GI blinded in World War II
who fathered five children, none of whom he had ever seen, whose sight was restored after 48
years by a donated cornea; a man who was so short of breath that he couldn’t walk and talk at
the same time but, after a transplant, ran a marathon alongside the father of the girl whose
lungs saved his life; and a police officer, shot at close range, whose wounds were so large
that his rescuers had to put their fists in them to slow the flow of blood.
Others are donor families who, though numb with pain, put their grief on one side to save the
lives of complete strangers or living donors, people who undergo an otherwise entirely
unnecessary operation to donate a kidney to someone they have never met, because "they need
it more than I do." Still others are on the waiting list, like the woman in the prime of life
terrified that unless a donated kidney comes soon her son will be left without a mother.
Professionals also tell their stories, such as the transplant coordinators, who have to ask
bereaved families if they will give something more at the worst moments of their lives, and
the pilot of the aircraft racing to deliver organs to dying patients.
"The sobering fact is that any one of us could need a new organ or tissue to save our lives
-- and virtually every one of us could be a donor," Green writes. "The results of
transplantation
are astounding. However many times it happens, an inert organ, that has been taken from someone
already dead, and springs suddenly into life in another dying body, still seems to most of us
to have more in common with science fiction than regular medicine."
Results differ for different organs, he adds, but about 90 percent of patients who have had a
heart transplant are alive after one year, 75 percent after five years and 55 percent after ten
years. "Given that all these people were terminally ill, that many were close to death at the
time of their operation and that, over the years, some proportion of them will die from unrelated
causes, the distance transplantation has come speaks for itself."
Every month, however, the waiting list grows. "These people live perpetually on the edge, always
aware of a winner-takes-all race between a wasting disease and a cure over which they have no
control."
A donation produces on average three or four organs, saving three or four families from
devastation, in addition to tissue that can help up to 50 people, Green points out. "With that
much on the line, I often wonder what possible debate there can be about what is the right thing
to do."
Read a few chapters from The Gift that Heals
The Gift that Heals: Stories of hope, renewal and transformation through organ and tissue donation, which is
published jointly by the Nicholas Green Foundation and United Network for Organ Sharing,
can be
ordered here
or through major booksellers.
The Nicholas Green Foundation, set up by the Green family, is a non-profit
organization dedicated to furthering the cause of organ and tissue donation
around the world. It does this by spreading information to increase awareness of the
shortage of donors everywhere. It can also support a broad range of
children's causes. It produces videos and helps organize special events.
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© 1999-2003, The Nicholas Green Foundation
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