Guest guest Posted September 10, 2004 Report Share Posted September 10, 2004 HARVARD SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH Center for Health Communication Jay A. Winsten, Ph.D., Associate Dean and Center Director Highlights from this week's issue of Harvard's World Health News (www.WorldHealthNews.harvard.edu): When love isn't enough Without connections, Vermont woman died waiting for lung transplant By , Globe Staff | September 7, 2004 By the end, had more seniority at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital than some of the people who took care of her, celebrating holidays, birthdays, and even high school graduation while tethered to an oxygen tank as she waited for a lung transplant. For 18 months, lived on the ninth floor of this hospital 200 miles from home, never giving up hope that she would get her " miracle. " But as a rare degenerative disease finally destroyed her lungs, would get no miracle. Neither her youth nor her worsening condition made any difference under the rules that determine who gets the few lungs available for transplant and died this summer at 22, still waiting. 's death illustrates much that's wrong with the organ transplant system, where patients are subtly pitted against each other in a high-stakes competition: 86,177 people are waiting for an organ transplant in the United States, but only about 25,000 will get them this year, leaving thousands to die. Though the system is governed by elaborate rules to prevent favoritism, ethicists say that the well-connected can improve their transplant chances by maneuvers that include joining waiting lists in more than one city to running advertisements appealing for an organ donation. 's surgeon said her best shortcut to a transplant would have been to find two people each willing to give her a portion of one lung. But the difficult task of finding these " living donors " fell entirely to 's family, people from rural Vermont who had no connections in the Boston media and who felt uncomfortable asking relatives and friends for such a profound gift. New England organ transplant officials, meanwhile, as grew sicker, could do little for fear of appearing to favor one desperately needy patient over another. " It's a question that still bothers me: Could we have written more letters? Could we have asked more people? " said Ann Gilbert, 's mother. " It's easy to ask people for money. It's hard to ask people for a part of their body. " But some families have no such reservations, doing whatever it takes to give their loved one an edge. The family of Todd Krampitz, a 32-year-old dying of liver cancer, put up billboards around Houston this summer appealing for someone to give him a liver and directing people to a website, ToddNeedsALiver.com. Ethicists such as Arthur Caplan of the University of Pennsylvania, condemned the strategy, saying Krampitz used money to " cut out of line " for a transplant. But the publicity paid off: a family of an organ donor directed that his liver go to Krampitz, who received his transplant on Aug. 12, scarcely a month after his doctors said he needed it. The Virginia-based United Network for Organ Sharing, set up by Congress in 1984 to manage the national organ supply, has tried to eliminate favoritism, but the system has loopholes, Caplan said. In addition to end runs like Krampitz's, affluent patients can seek treatment at more than one transplant center so that they can be considered for organs in more than one region. Currently, about 6,000 people are registered on more than one regional waiting list. Dr. Leo Ginns, a lung transplant surgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital, said patients have offered to pay enormous amounts of money to get a transplant more quickly " and I have categorically told them we don't do that. " Still, public faith in the fairness of the system has been shaken when celebrities receive transplants after very short waits. Former New York Yankees slugger Mickey Mantle got his liver in Dallas after just two days on the waiting list in 1995, prompting widespread criticism, though doctors denied giving him special treatment. Unfortunately, 's step-father Denis, a furniture store employee, and mother, a snack bar manager, were in no position to offer bribes, put up billboards, or get treatment at multiple transplant centers. Instead, they played by the rules and waited. got her last glimpse of Canaan, Vt., from the back of an ambulance on Nov. 2, 2002, as she was rushed to an intensive care unit in Concord, N.H., to keep her lungs from failing. Doctors quickly sent her on to Mass. General, where she arrived weighing just 82 pounds. suffered from a rare, genetically inherited condition, Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, that, doctors told the family, " made her lungs look like an 80-year-old, three-pack-a-day cigarette smoker. " For years, she had not let respiratory problems get in the way of a normal life, playing baseball, riding horses, and even playing the clarinet. When her breathing got so labored that she needed oxygen, would sling the tank over a shoulder as she headed out the door. By the end of 2002, her condition was much worse: had a tracheotomy, a hole cut in her throat, that allowed a ventilator to mechanically inflate and deflate her lungs. Ginns, the lung transplant surgeon, was blunt in his assessment: needed two new lungs or she would die. Unfortunately, lungs are among the most scarce organs for transplant, with a waiting list that tripled during the last decade, while the number of donations remained stagnant. As a result, lung transplant candidates commonly wait two to three years for their surgery, and 9 percent die waiting each year, a higher death rate than for any other organ waiting list except intestines. had to face a second reality: she would have to live at the rehabilitation hospital because she needed to remain on a ventilator and be close by, since lungs must be transplanted within six hours of removal. Soon, she became the adopted daughter of the ninth floor, with Spaulding Rehab staff sneaking her junk food, planning parties for her, and holding her hand as she fell asleep. " She was so far from home. We were like her family, " said Anne Marie Larocca, program director for Spaulding's complex medical unit. Early on, Ginns told and her parents about the possibility of living lung donations, a relatively rare procedure that Mass. General most commonly performs on younger transplant patients like . For the donor, the procedure carries the same risks as any surgery and reduces his or her lung capacity by 20 percent, which may preclude activities like marathoning or mountain climbing. But staff at Mass. General could not help the family find living donors, in part because they don't want to seem to be pressing healthy people to risk the surgery. Since there is no centralized system tracking people who have agreed to make a lung donation, 's family started from scratch. Ann Gilbert had the wrong blood type to make the donation, and both she and felt uncomfortable asking people to take such a risk. So the effort to find living donors didn't really take off until March of this year when Spaulding chaplain Joan Horgan arranged TV interviews for to discuss her need for a transplant. Horgan even offered to donate a lobe of her lung, but she was too small. In the end, the family identified one suitable donor, her aunt Shirley , but couldn't find the crucial second. As 's health slid precipitously in July, there was nothing the Mass. General team could do to speed her transplant since lungs are allocated based on seniority and whether the lung is a good match for the patient. The United Network for Organ Sharing board voted to change the rules next year so that the sickest patients who would benefit most from a transplant get preference, but it comes too late for , who died on July 18. Ultimately, the best hope for avoiding tragic endings like 's lies in expanding the pool of available lungs, said Dr. Egan, a University of North Carolina transplant surgeon who chaired the United Network for Organ Sharing subcommittee on lung transplants. Egan is working with a team that is studying the possibility of transplanting lungs from people who die outside of the hospital, which is not done now for fear that the lungs begin deteriorating too soon to make a transplant viable. 's mother wants more support for families pursuing living donations. Most people don't even know such donations are possible, and hospitals nationwide have never done more than 59 of them in a year. A registry of people who would consider being donors and more guidance for families could greatly boost those numbers, she said. Despite everything, Gilbert is grateful for the care her daughter received during her ordeal, hugging medical staff at the tearful memorial they held for at Spaulding last month. Ginns, the surgeon, said the memory of sticks with him, concluding sadly, " It was not the outcome anyone wanted. " can be reached by email at allen@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 10, 2004 Report Share Posted September 10, 2004 HARVARD SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH Center for Health Communication Jay A. Winsten, Ph.D., Associate Dean and Center Director Highlights from this week's issue of Harvard's World Health News (www.WorldHealthNews.harvard.edu): When love isn't enough Without connections, Vermont woman died waiting for lung transplant By , Globe Staff | September 7, 2004 By the end, had more seniority at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital than some of the people who took care of her, celebrating holidays, birthdays, and even high school graduation while tethered to an oxygen tank as she waited for a lung transplant. For 18 months, lived on the ninth floor of this hospital 200 miles from home, never giving up hope that she would get her " miracle. " But as a rare degenerative disease finally destroyed her lungs, would get no miracle. Neither her youth nor her worsening condition made any difference under the rules that determine who gets the few lungs available for transplant and died this summer at 22, still waiting. 's death illustrates much that's wrong with the organ transplant system, where patients are subtly pitted against each other in a high-stakes competition: 86,177 people are waiting for an organ transplant in the United States, but only about 25,000 will get them this year, leaving thousands to die. Though the system is governed by elaborate rules to prevent favoritism, ethicists say that the well-connected can improve their transplant chances by maneuvers that include joining waiting lists in more than one city to running advertisements appealing for an organ donation. 's surgeon said her best shortcut to a transplant would have been to find two people each willing to give her a portion of one lung. But the difficult task of finding these " living donors " fell entirely to 's family, people from rural Vermont who had no connections in the Boston media and who felt uncomfortable asking relatives and friends for such a profound gift. New England organ transplant officials, meanwhile, as grew sicker, could do little for fear of appearing to favor one desperately needy patient over another. " It's a question that still bothers me: Could we have written more letters? Could we have asked more people? " said Ann Gilbert, 's mother. " It's easy to ask people for money. It's hard to ask people for a part of their body. " But some families have no such reservations, doing whatever it takes to give their loved one an edge. The family of Todd Krampitz, a 32-year-old dying of liver cancer, put up billboards around Houston this summer appealing for someone to give him a liver and directing people to a website, ToddNeedsALiver.com. Ethicists such as Arthur Caplan of the University of Pennsylvania, condemned the strategy, saying Krampitz used money to " cut out of line " for a transplant. But the publicity paid off: a family of an organ donor directed that his liver go to Krampitz, who received his transplant on Aug. 12, scarcely a month after his doctors said he needed it. The Virginia-based United Network for Organ Sharing, set up by Congress in 1984 to manage the national organ supply, has tried to eliminate favoritism, but the system has loopholes, Caplan said. In addition to end runs like Krampitz's, affluent patients can seek treatment at more than one transplant center so that they can be considered for organs in more than one region. Currently, about 6,000 people are registered on more than one regional waiting list. Dr. Leo Ginns, a lung transplant surgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital, said patients have offered to pay enormous amounts of money to get a transplant more quickly " and I have categorically told them we don't do that. " Still, public faith in the fairness of the system has been shaken when celebrities receive transplants after very short waits. Former New York Yankees slugger Mickey Mantle got his liver in Dallas after just two days on the waiting list in 1995, prompting widespread criticism, though doctors denied giving him special treatment. Unfortunately, 's step-father Denis, a furniture store employee, and mother, a snack bar manager, were in no position to offer bribes, put up billboards, or get treatment at multiple transplant centers. Instead, they played by the rules and waited. got her last glimpse of Canaan, Vt., from the back of an ambulance on Nov. 2, 2002, as she was rushed to an intensive care unit in Concord, N.H., to keep her lungs from failing. Doctors quickly sent her on to Mass. General, where she arrived weighing just 82 pounds. suffered from a rare, genetically inherited condition, Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, that, doctors told the family, " made her lungs look like an 80-year-old, three-pack-a-day cigarette smoker. " For years, she had not let respiratory problems get in the way of a normal life, playing baseball, riding horses, and even playing the clarinet. When her breathing got so labored that she needed oxygen, would sling the tank over a shoulder as she headed out the door. By the end of 2002, her condition was much worse: had a tracheotomy, a hole cut in her throat, that allowed a ventilator to mechanically inflate and deflate her lungs. Ginns, the lung transplant surgeon, was blunt in his assessment: needed two new lungs or she would die. Unfortunately, lungs are among the most scarce organs for transplant, with a waiting list that tripled during the last decade, while the number of donations remained stagnant. As a result, lung transplant candidates commonly wait two to three years for their surgery, and 9 percent die waiting each year, a higher death rate than for any other organ waiting list except intestines. had to face a second reality: she would have to live at the rehabilitation hospital because she needed to remain on a ventilator and be close by, since lungs must be transplanted within six hours of removal. Soon, she became the adopted daughter of the ninth floor, with Spaulding Rehab staff sneaking her junk food, planning parties for her, and holding her hand as she fell asleep. " She was so far from home. We were like her family, " said Anne Marie Larocca, program director for Spaulding's complex medical unit. Early on, Ginns told and her parents about the possibility of living lung donations, a relatively rare procedure that Mass. General most commonly performs on younger transplant patients like . For the donor, the procedure carries the same risks as any surgery and reduces his or her lung capacity by 20 percent, which may preclude activities like marathoning or mountain climbing. But staff at Mass. General could not help the family find living donors, in part because they don't want to seem to be pressing healthy people to risk the surgery. Since there is no centralized system tracking people who have agreed to make a lung donation, 's family started from scratch. Ann Gilbert had the wrong blood type to make the donation, and both she and felt uncomfortable asking people to take such a risk. So the effort to find living donors didn't really take off until March of this year when Spaulding chaplain Joan Horgan arranged TV interviews for to discuss her need for a transplant. Horgan even offered to donate a lobe of her lung, but she was too small. In the end, the family identified one suitable donor, her aunt Shirley , but couldn't find the crucial second. As 's health slid precipitously in July, there was nothing the Mass. General team could do to speed her transplant since lungs are allocated based on seniority and whether the lung is a good match for the patient. The United Network for Organ Sharing board voted to change the rules next year so that the sickest patients who would benefit most from a transplant get preference, but it comes too late for , who died on July 18. Ultimately, the best hope for avoiding tragic endings like 's lies in expanding the pool of available lungs, said Dr. Egan, a University of North Carolina transplant surgeon who chaired the United Network for Organ Sharing subcommittee on lung transplants. Egan is working with a team that is studying the possibility of transplanting lungs from people who die outside of the hospital, which is not done now for fear that the lungs begin deteriorating too soon to make a transplant viable. 's mother wants more support for families pursuing living donations. Most people don't even know such donations are possible, and hospitals nationwide have never done more than 59 of them in a year. A registry of people who would consider being donors and more guidance for families could greatly boost those numbers, she said. Despite everything, Gilbert is grateful for the care her daughter received during her ordeal, hugging medical staff at the tearful memorial they held for at Spaulding last month. Ginns, the surgeon, said the memory of sticks with him, concluding sadly, " It was not the outcome anyone wanted. " can be reached by email at allen@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 10, 2004 Report Share Posted September 10, 2004 HARVARD SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH Center for Health Communication Jay A. Winsten, Ph.D., Associate Dean and Center Director Highlights from this week's issue of Harvard's World Health News (www.WorldHealthNews.harvard.edu): When love isn't enough Without connections, Vermont woman died waiting for lung transplant By , Globe Staff | September 7, 2004 By the end, had more seniority at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital than some of the people who took care of her, celebrating holidays, birthdays, and even high school graduation while tethered to an oxygen tank as she waited for a lung transplant. For 18 months, lived on the ninth floor of this hospital 200 miles from home, never giving up hope that she would get her " miracle. " But as a rare degenerative disease finally destroyed her lungs, would get no miracle. Neither her youth nor her worsening condition made any difference under the rules that determine who gets the few lungs available for transplant and died this summer at 22, still waiting. 's death illustrates much that's wrong with the organ transplant system, where patients are subtly pitted against each other in a high-stakes competition: 86,177 people are waiting for an organ transplant in the United States, but only about 25,000 will get them this year, leaving thousands to die. Though the system is governed by elaborate rules to prevent favoritism, ethicists say that the well-connected can improve their transplant chances by maneuvers that include joining waiting lists in more than one city to running advertisements appealing for an organ donation. 's surgeon said her best shortcut to a transplant would have been to find two people each willing to give her a portion of one lung. But the difficult task of finding these " living donors " fell entirely to 's family, people from rural Vermont who had no connections in the Boston media and who felt uncomfortable asking relatives and friends for such a profound gift. New England organ transplant officials, meanwhile, as grew sicker, could do little for fear of appearing to favor one desperately needy patient over another. " It's a question that still bothers me: Could we have written more letters? Could we have asked more people? " said Ann Gilbert, 's mother. " It's easy to ask people for money. It's hard to ask people for a part of their body. " But some families have no such reservations, doing whatever it takes to give their loved one an edge. The family of Todd Krampitz, a 32-year-old dying of liver cancer, put up billboards around Houston this summer appealing for someone to give him a liver and directing people to a website, ToddNeedsALiver.com. Ethicists such as Arthur Caplan of the University of Pennsylvania, condemned the strategy, saying Krampitz used money to " cut out of line " for a transplant. But the publicity paid off: a family of an organ donor directed that his liver go to Krampitz, who received his transplant on Aug. 12, scarcely a month after his doctors said he needed it. The Virginia-based United Network for Organ Sharing, set up by Congress in 1984 to manage the national organ supply, has tried to eliminate favoritism, but the system has loopholes, Caplan said. In addition to end runs like Krampitz's, affluent patients can seek treatment at more than one transplant center so that they can be considered for organs in more than one region. Currently, about 6,000 people are registered on more than one regional waiting list. Dr. Leo Ginns, a lung transplant surgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital, said patients have offered to pay enormous amounts of money to get a transplant more quickly " and I have categorically told them we don't do that. " Still, public faith in the fairness of the system has been shaken when celebrities receive transplants after very short waits. Former New York Yankees slugger Mickey Mantle got his liver in Dallas after just two days on the waiting list in 1995, prompting widespread criticism, though doctors denied giving him special treatment. Unfortunately, 's step-father Denis, a furniture store employee, and mother, a snack bar manager, were in no position to offer bribes, put up billboards, or get treatment at multiple transplant centers. Instead, they played by the rules and waited. got her last glimpse of Canaan, Vt., from the back of an ambulance on Nov. 2, 2002, as she was rushed to an intensive care unit in Concord, N.H., to keep her lungs from failing. Doctors quickly sent her on to Mass. General, where she arrived weighing just 82 pounds. suffered from a rare, genetically inherited condition, Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, that, doctors told the family, " made her lungs look like an 80-year-old, three-pack-a-day cigarette smoker. " For years, she had not let respiratory problems get in the way of a normal life, playing baseball, riding horses, and even playing the clarinet. When her breathing got so labored that she needed oxygen, would sling the tank over a shoulder as she headed out the door. By the end of 2002, her condition was much worse: had a tracheotomy, a hole cut in her throat, that allowed a ventilator to mechanically inflate and deflate her lungs. Ginns, the lung transplant surgeon, was blunt in his assessment: needed two new lungs or she would die. Unfortunately, lungs are among the most scarce organs for transplant, with a waiting list that tripled during the last decade, while the number of donations remained stagnant. As a result, lung transplant candidates commonly wait two to three years for their surgery, and 9 percent die waiting each year, a higher death rate than for any other organ waiting list except intestines. had to face a second reality: she would have to live at the rehabilitation hospital because she needed to remain on a ventilator and be close by, since lungs must be transplanted within six hours of removal. Soon, she became the adopted daughter of the ninth floor, with Spaulding Rehab staff sneaking her junk food, planning parties for her, and holding her hand as she fell asleep. " She was so far from home. We were like her family, " said Anne Marie Larocca, program director for Spaulding's complex medical unit. Early on, Ginns told and her parents about the possibility of living lung donations, a relatively rare procedure that Mass. General most commonly performs on younger transplant patients like . For the donor, the procedure carries the same risks as any surgery and reduces his or her lung capacity by 20 percent, which may preclude activities like marathoning or mountain climbing. But staff at Mass. General could not help the family find living donors, in part because they don't want to seem to be pressing healthy people to risk the surgery. Since there is no centralized system tracking people who have agreed to make a lung donation, 's family started from scratch. Ann Gilbert had the wrong blood type to make the donation, and both she and felt uncomfortable asking people to take such a risk. So the effort to find living donors didn't really take off until March of this year when Spaulding chaplain Joan Horgan arranged TV interviews for to discuss her need for a transplant. Horgan even offered to donate a lobe of her lung, but she was too small. In the end, the family identified one suitable donor, her aunt Shirley , but couldn't find the crucial second. As 's health slid precipitously in July, there was nothing the Mass. General team could do to speed her transplant since lungs are allocated based on seniority and whether the lung is a good match for the patient. The United Network for Organ Sharing board voted to change the rules next year so that the sickest patients who would benefit most from a transplant get preference, but it comes too late for , who died on July 18. Ultimately, the best hope for avoiding tragic endings like 's lies in expanding the pool of available lungs, said Dr. Egan, a University of North Carolina transplant surgeon who chaired the United Network for Organ Sharing subcommittee on lung transplants. Egan is working with a team that is studying the possibility of transplanting lungs from people who die outside of the hospital, which is not done now for fear that the lungs begin deteriorating too soon to make a transplant viable. 's mother wants more support for families pursuing living donations. Most people don't even know such donations are possible, and hospitals nationwide have never done more than 59 of them in a year. A registry of people who would consider being donors and more guidance for families could greatly boost those numbers, she said. Despite everything, Gilbert is grateful for the care her daughter received during her ordeal, hugging medical staff at the tearful memorial they held for at Spaulding last month. Ginns, the surgeon, said the memory of sticks with him, concluding sadly, " It was not the outcome anyone wanted. " can be reached by email at allen@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 10, 2004 Report Share Posted September 10, 2004 HARVARD SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH Center for Health Communication Jay A. Winsten, Ph.D., Associate Dean and Center Director Highlights from this week's issue of Harvard's World Health News (www.WorldHealthNews.harvard.edu): When love isn't enough Without connections, Vermont woman died waiting for lung transplant By , Globe Staff | September 7, 2004 By the end, had more seniority at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital than some of the people who took care of her, celebrating holidays, birthdays, and even high school graduation while tethered to an oxygen tank as she waited for a lung transplant. For 18 months, lived on the ninth floor of this hospital 200 miles from home, never giving up hope that she would get her " miracle. " But as a rare degenerative disease finally destroyed her lungs, would get no miracle. Neither her youth nor her worsening condition made any difference under the rules that determine who gets the few lungs available for transplant and died this summer at 22, still waiting. 's death illustrates much that's wrong with the organ transplant system, where patients are subtly pitted against each other in a high-stakes competition: 86,177 people are waiting for an organ transplant in the United States, but only about 25,000 will get them this year, leaving thousands to die. Though the system is governed by elaborate rules to prevent favoritism, ethicists say that the well-connected can improve their transplant chances by maneuvers that include joining waiting lists in more than one city to running advertisements appealing for an organ donation. 's surgeon said her best shortcut to a transplant would have been to find two people each willing to give her a portion of one lung. But the difficult task of finding these " living donors " fell entirely to 's family, people from rural Vermont who had no connections in the Boston media and who felt uncomfortable asking relatives and friends for such a profound gift. New England organ transplant officials, meanwhile, as grew sicker, could do little for fear of appearing to favor one desperately needy patient over another. " It's a question that still bothers me: Could we have written more letters? Could we have asked more people? " said Ann Gilbert, 's mother. " It's easy to ask people for money. It's hard to ask people for a part of their body. " But some families have no such reservations, doing whatever it takes to give their loved one an edge. The family of Todd Krampitz, a 32-year-old dying of liver cancer, put up billboards around Houston this summer appealing for someone to give him a liver and directing people to a website, ToddNeedsALiver.com. Ethicists such as Arthur Caplan of the University of Pennsylvania, condemned the strategy, saying Krampitz used money to " cut out of line " for a transplant. But the publicity paid off: a family of an organ donor directed that his liver go to Krampitz, who received his transplant on Aug. 12, scarcely a month after his doctors said he needed it. The Virginia-based United Network for Organ Sharing, set up by Congress in 1984 to manage the national organ supply, has tried to eliminate favoritism, but the system has loopholes, Caplan said. In addition to end runs like Krampitz's, affluent patients can seek treatment at more than one transplant center so that they can be considered for organs in more than one region. Currently, about 6,000 people are registered on more than one regional waiting list. Dr. Leo Ginns, a lung transplant surgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital, said patients have offered to pay enormous amounts of money to get a transplant more quickly " and I have categorically told them we don't do that. " Still, public faith in the fairness of the system has been shaken when celebrities receive transplants after very short waits. Former New York Yankees slugger Mickey Mantle got his liver in Dallas after just two days on the waiting list in 1995, prompting widespread criticism, though doctors denied giving him special treatment. Unfortunately, 's step-father Denis, a furniture store employee, and mother, a snack bar manager, were in no position to offer bribes, put up billboards, or get treatment at multiple transplant centers. Instead, they played by the rules and waited. got her last glimpse of Canaan, Vt., from the back of an ambulance on Nov. 2, 2002, as she was rushed to an intensive care unit in Concord, N.H., to keep her lungs from failing. Doctors quickly sent her on to Mass. General, where she arrived weighing just 82 pounds. suffered from a rare, genetically inherited condition, Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, that, doctors told the family, " made her lungs look like an 80-year-old, three-pack-a-day cigarette smoker. " For years, she had not let respiratory problems get in the way of a normal life, playing baseball, riding horses, and even playing the clarinet. When her breathing got so labored that she needed oxygen, would sling the tank over a shoulder as she headed out the door. By the end of 2002, her condition was much worse: had a tracheotomy, a hole cut in her throat, that allowed a ventilator to mechanically inflate and deflate her lungs. Ginns, the lung transplant surgeon, was blunt in his assessment: needed two new lungs or she would die. Unfortunately, lungs are among the most scarce organs for transplant, with a waiting list that tripled during the last decade, while the number of donations remained stagnant. As a result, lung transplant candidates commonly wait two to three years for their surgery, and 9 percent die waiting each year, a higher death rate than for any other organ waiting list except intestines. had to face a second reality: she would have to live at the rehabilitation hospital because she needed to remain on a ventilator and be close by, since lungs must be transplanted within six hours of removal. Soon, she became the adopted daughter of the ninth floor, with Spaulding Rehab staff sneaking her junk food, planning parties for her, and holding her hand as she fell asleep. " She was so far from home. We were like her family, " said Anne Marie Larocca, program director for Spaulding's complex medical unit. Early on, Ginns told and her parents about the possibility of living lung donations, a relatively rare procedure that Mass. General most commonly performs on younger transplant patients like . For the donor, the procedure carries the same risks as any surgery and reduces his or her lung capacity by 20 percent, which may preclude activities like marathoning or mountain climbing. But staff at Mass. General could not help the family find living donors, in part because they don't want to seem to be pressing healthy people to risk the surgery. Since there is no centralized system tracking people who have agreed to make a lung donation, 's family started from scratch. Ann Gilbert had the wrong blood type to make the donation, and both she and felt uncomfortable asking people to take such a risk. So the effort to find living donors didn't really take off until March of this year when Spaulding chaplain Joan Horgan arranged TV interviews for to discuss her need for a transplant. Horgan even offered to donate a lobe of her lung, but she was too small. In the end, the family identified one suitable donor, her aunt Shirley , but couldn't find the crucial second. As 's health slid precipitously in July, there was nothing the Mass. General team could do to speed her transplant since lungs are allocated based on seniority and whether the lung is a good match for the patient. The United Network for Organ Sharing board voted to change the rules next year so that the sickest patients who would benefit most from a transplant get preference, but it comes too late for , who died on July 18. Ultimately, the best hope for avoiding tragic endings like 's lies in expanding the pool of available lungs, said Dr. Egan, a University of North Carolina transplant surgeon who chaired the United Network for Organ Sharing subcommittee on lung transplants. Egan is working with a team that is studying the possibility of transplanting lungs from people who die outside of the hospital, which is not done now for fear that the lungs begin deteriorating too soon to make a transplant viable. 's mother wants more support for families pursuing living donations. Most people don't even know such donations are possible, and hospitals nationwide have never done more than 59 of them in a year. A registry of people who would consider being donors and more guidance for families could greatly boost those numbers, she said. Despite everything, Gilbert is grateful for the care her daughter received during her ordeal, hugging medical staff at the tearful memorial they held for at Spaulding last month. Ginns, the surgeon, said the memory of sticks with him, concluding sadly, " It was not the outcome anyone wanted. " can be reached by email at allen@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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