Perhaps, if it's for a good cause.
(My apologies about the links in this post, which for whatever reason are hardly noticeable. And I don't know how to fix that. Look closely for the words which that are just a touch different than the rest of the text.)
I've learned over the years that one never knows down which roads your musings will travel, and what will bounce back at you.
When I started working on the post 'There are None so Blind', I didn't have any lofty plans for it; just this blog post. However, while I was writing, I needed answers to certain questions. For example, why are the wait lists for corneal transplants so long. The best person to answer that would be my ophthalmologist, Dr. Rocha, who also happens to be the President of the Canadian Ophthalmological Society (COS).
I found out there was no short answer for this question, so my article ended up being longer than I first anticipated. I was also fascinated with the information from Dr. Rocha, and read various articles on this topic online. Information I thought would be interesting for other people as well. When I finished writing, I asked Dr. Rocha if he'd have time to edit it, as I wanted my article to be accurate. He kindly obliged and asked if he can share it with the COS. I had no problem with that, because by that time I'd learned so much about tissue donations and the lack of awareness so felt that it's a message that needs to be widely spread.
Shortly after, Courtny Vaz, COS Coordinator, Communications and Public Affairs contacted me asking for permission to post my article on their website, See the Possibilities. She also wanted to know, with World Sight Day on October the 12th, if I'd be OK if she'd share my article with the media, should anybody be interested. I chuckled , thinking nothing will happen, but gave my consent.
Then I got an email from Fontane Choi, who's with a PR agency working with the Canadian Ophthalmological Society. She wanted to know if I would be willing to do a live interview with Mike Ross and Joeita Gupta at Accessible Media Inc. in Toronto. Live? I've never done a live interview before. I guess my nothing-will-happen chuckle was short-lived. To say I wasn't nervous about a live interview would be an outright lie. I never like to be on the air, live or taped. Period. So my first instinct was to decline. However, I thought about this for a few minutes and decided I wanted to help spread the message about organ and tissue donation, which is the whole point to my article, and agreed to the interview. This is worth venturing out of my comfort zone for. Plus, it's going to be just a short ten minute interview. Hopefully I won't have to bumble my way through it.
October 12, World Sight Day, I was going to be on air together with Dr. Phil Hooper, an ophthalmologist in London, Ontario. I liked that part, that way I won't have to talk so much. You can listen to it here: Live From Studio 5. Click on 'Receiving a Corneal Transplant'. If you don't have iTunes on your device, you'll have to first download it; the link to the free download is right there at the top of the Live from Studio 5 page. (UPDATE: Apparently the podcasts don't stay up very long, so you can't listen to it anymore. So sorry.)
That same morning Fontane Choi emailed and asked if I'd be willing to do another interview that day, this time with Global News. Oh. My. Word. What did I get myself into? Okay, so twice in one day I crawled out of my comfort zone, in the name of spreading an important message. But this time it was a taped interview - somewhat easier. You can read this one here. Both interviews went well, though.
My sincere thanks to Dr. Rocha, Courtny Vaz and Fontane Choi for sharing my article. It was a pleasure working with you! I appreciate all your help!
You too, can help spread this important message by sharing the above mentioned article, There are None so Blind via Email, Twitter, Facebook, WhatsApp, or any other way you'd like. Some of these are made fairly easy at the bottom of this blog post. Who knows, perhaps because of your sharing it, some future organ or tissue recipient will be grateful.
Showing posts with label Organ Donation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Organ Donation. Show all posts
Saturday, 14 October 2017
Sunday, 8 October 2017
With Heartfelt Gratitude for Organ and Tissue Donors
On this day most of us pause and reflect on the many things we're thankful for. With each passing year it seems our lists grow longer. As part of my lengthy list I've included organ and tissue donors this year. And yet I feel I should have included that long ago, even though I wasn't a recipient before. But alas, it's one of those blessings we take for granted until we're directly touched by it. With my right eye no longer legally blind, the song, I Can See Clearly Now has taken on new meaning!
As I've noted in a previous post, not a day goes by without me thinking about my cornea donor. Today my thoughts turned toward my donor's family who will most likely be sitting 'round a festive table missing a family member they lost over the summer. A family member who chose to become a donor. I'm grateful to that family for respecting their loved one's wishes of having his/her organs and tissues donated. I'm hoping this final act of love brings them a measure of peace, knowing these precious gifts have impacted the recipients significantly.
What's on your gratitude list that you never thought to add before?
Monday, 25 September 2017
There Are None So Blind…
(Please share this post. It's a message I feel needs to be spread. Thanks! You'll see why, after you've read it.)
“Your only option is a corneal transplant,”
the ophthalmologist stated matter-of-factly.” Although I’d known for years it
could one day come to that, I needed time for the reality of having a part of
my eye replaced with donor tissue, to sink in.
For years
contact lenses provided me with the good vision I lost due to keratoconus, an
eye condition in which the
normally dome-shaped cornea progressively thins, causing a cone-like bulge to
develop. I’m not sure what caused this disorder,
but it could have happened when my right eye met a wash line while playing tag
as a child. It stung a bit, but not enough for me to complain, or see a doctor.
I simply rubbed it a few minutes, stayed in the game and eventually forgot
about it. Today, this is hard to fathom, but I obviously got used to distorted
vision.
![]() |
National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health |
Years later
the hard lens started irritating my eye, so my optometrist suggested lens
piggybacking. Sitting under the hard lens, a soft lens served as protection for
the cornea – a perfect solution for decades. However, a few years ago my right
eye again started to feel irritated most of the time, to the point where I
couldn’t wear contacts at all. The doctor prescribed lubricating eye drops and a
variety of lenses, but they were only short term solutions.
Then I was referred
to a contact lens specialist in Winnipeg, who had me try different types of lenses
as well, all of which continued to irritate my eye. By then I was tired of my
sore eye and incompatible lenses. “I believe my eye is trying to tell me that
my contact lens days are over.” I told the specialist. “What other options are
there?” He referred me to Dr. Rocha, an ophthalmologist in Brandon, MB,
thinking corneal collagen cross-linking would be the answer. This
technique stiffens the cornea through a combination of exposure to ultraviolet
light and eye drops containing vitamin B2. After examining my eyes, Dr. Rocha told me this procedure would be “a
waste of your money and my time.” I was down to my last resort, a corneal
transplant.
In corneal
transplants, the surgeon first decides on either partial or full thickness,
based on the condition of the cornea. For my eye, it had to be a full thickness
corneal transplant. Next the damaged corneal tissue is removed with an
instrument called a trephine, similar to a cookie cutter. The cornea is then
replaced with a precisely matched donor corneal graft stitched in place by
hair-thin sutures.
Being on a
waiting list for over a year, gave me ample time to ponder this option. Questions
scrolled through my mind: How successful is this type of surgery? How long does
it take for the eye to heal? How often are donor corneas rejected? Over clinic
visits and phone calls, my fears were allayed and I was well prepared, when my call
came. However, I had one lingering thought: in order for me to receive a donor
cornea, someone would have to die. And that person would have chosen to donate his/her organs and
tissue.
A corneal
transplant is not life-saving surgery like receiving a new heart, kidney or
liver, and I can’t imagine how these people feel after surgery. However, it is
life-changing; not a day goes by without me thinking about my donor, this
person whose final act of love gave me better vision.
When my name
was placed on the list, I never expected to have to wait fourteen months for a
donor cornea. When I asked Dr. Rocha about the long wait, he explained that
there are three reasons: education, systems and processes, and funding.
“More awareness on the part of donors but
also health personnel and authorities is needed.” Dr. Rocha elaborated, “Signing the driver’s license as a donor is
not enough. Corneal tissue can be harvested within six hours of death,
processed within twelve hours and used up to fourteen days
later. There is no reason why this should be difficult, other than the
lack of knowledge that has prevailed.”
It seems many people are not aware of the need for organs and tissue, or are
indifferent. Granted, becoming an organ donor is not a topic that’s readily
discussed, but that doesn’t mean it shouldn’t happen, especially since
thousands of Canadians are waiting for corneal transplants, not to mention
other organs. Had I never been on a wait list, I wouldn’t have thought to
inquire about this, and would have remained in the dark about the ongoing
issues surrounding corneal transplants. Some
of these issues are systems and processes, Dr. Rocha pointed out:
“There are laws for mandatory reporting of deaths depending on the province.
It has been estimated that, for example, in Manitoba, ensuring a proper
reporting and procurement process in a single hospital, could provide the
corneal transplantation needs for the whole province.”
Waiting for
a donor cornea has opened my eyes not only to the need for donors, but also the
obstacles that hinder doctors from helping patients in need of corneal
transplants. It also helped me see things in a new light and made me more
receptive of ideas I might not have agreed with before. For example, if someone
had told me a few years ago that in Spain, when a person dies it’s legal for
doctors to harvest the organs and tissue, I would have been appalled. In
Canada, even though someone opted to be a donor, that person’s family can veto
this decision. Since the family is already experiencing the trauma of losing a
loved one, doctors will not insist, meaning the organs and tissue are lost. Many
would likely argue that the Canadian law is right, and Spain’s Presumed
Consent Legislation is wrong. For
me it comes down to one question: Why bury precious organs and tissue that
would greatly benefit other human beings?
The third
reason for long wait lists, is a problem that other healthcare areas face as
well; government funding:
“A few years ago,” Dr. Rocha informed me, “I was part
of a group coordinated by the Canadian Blood Services, tasked with establishing
a nation-wide organ and tissue donation. This initiative was prompted by
Government. However, after several years of work including meetings and
conference calls, when we were ready to proceed, both Federal and Provincial
Governments denied further funding for the project.”
Someone in need of a cornea could wait up to two years, because there
are not enough donors in Manitoba. Since we lack accreditation across Canada
and inter provincial co-operation, surgeons are unable to acquire donor corneas
available in other provinces. An example occurred a few years ago when seventy healthy
surplus corneas from Quebec were wasted because other provinces only recognize
the Eye Bank of America accreditation, disregarding the fact that Quebec’s eye bank
has Health Canada accreditation. (Moore, 2013) It’s appalling to
think that people are going blind when government funding could provide a
solution.
We have so
much to be thankful for in our country, and some of those blessings were
highlighted for me during my corneal transplant: our health care system,
hospitals, doctors and their staff. Concerning transplants however, medicine,
science, state-of-the-art micro- surgical equipment and skilled surgeons cannot
provide anyone with a new cornea or any other organ, without donors and their
supportive families.
Prior to my
right eye giving me trouble, I never thought about organ and tissue donations long
enough to put some action behind the thought. There’s nothing like facing a
transplant to lend some perspective: I finally signed up to be a donor! I
couldn’t put my name on a wait list, without first declaring my intent to be a
donor myself.
Sign Up For Life is the Canadian website where
becoming a donor is fairly easy. While it feels strange to click on organs and
tissue you’d wish to donate, that only lasts a few minutes. The decision to be
a donor can impact a person waiting for an organ or tissue for a lifetime.
Because
someone chose to be a donor, I was able to say farewell to keratoconus. Through
this journey my eyes have been opened to the issues surrounding corneal
transplants as well. The solutions to make our Canadian corneal transplantation
system more efficient seem simple enough, if only governments and ophthalmologist
shared the same passion and vision for helping people.
“The only thing worse than being
blind, is having sight and no vision.” Helen Keller
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