Upstate Health magazine, fall 2016

Page 6

A kidney unites them

CARING FOR PATIENTS

Facebook connects Upstate nurse with woman needing a kidney transplant

BY AMBER SMITH

AS JODY ADAMS SCROLLED THROUGH FACEBOOK in January, one post stuck with her. It was written from the point of view of a baby boy named Carter, seeking someone to donate a kidney to his ailing mother. A nurse for 12 years and the mother of six children, Adams says the idea of donating one of her healthy kidneys never crossed her mind — until she read that post. She didn’t want to imagine a little boy growing up without a mother, especially if she could help. And it didn’t matter to her that she did not know the family. Rereading the post, she got the feeling that her kidney would be a match for the young mother. Adams, who commutes from a small rural town in Steuben County to work as a nurse at Upstate University Hospital, called the transplant program to begin the process of becoming a living donor. e young mother, Victoria Fitzpatrick, was a stranger to Adams. “Yes, she’s a stranger,” Adams would explain to friends who questioned her plan to donate, “but this is somebody’s daughter, somebody’s mother.” Adams, 40, has a daughter named Victoria. e girl’s fih birthday is the day Adams received the call from the transplant center saying she was a match for Fitzpatrick, 30, of Lafayette. “Altruistic donation is one of the most worthy causes an individual can be involved in,” says Rainer Gruessner, MD, chief of transplant services. “It really is a gi of life.” Fitzpatrick’s health status has been challenging since she was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes at age 10. Two years ago she developed end-stage renal disease and went on dialysis. en last summer as she was being evaluated to join the kidney transplant waiting list, she discovered she was pregnant. Her pregnancy was high risk, requiring dialysis for six hours a day, six days a week. Carter was born Nov. 4, eight weeks premature and weighing just 3 pounds, 14 ounces. ree days aer the delivery, Fitzpatrick lost her vision to diabetic retinopathy. Surgery has since restored her sight. And, she’s become engaged to Carter’s father, Daniel Bequer. Her mother, Janet Burton, craed the Facebook post seeking a kidney in January, using a picture of Fitzpatrick holding Carter. “Hi! My name is Carter. is is my mommy, Victoria, holding me. She’s pretty and smells nice. She doesn’t feel so good though,” it said. “Dad says she needs a new kid knee because hers are broken, and we

Victoria Fitzpatrick (left) hugs her kidney donor, Jody Adams. PHOTO BY KATE RUTHERFORD

need someone to give her a new one.” Transplant surgeon Vaughn Whittaker, MD, says more than 50 phone calls came into the transplant center in the days aer that Facebook post from people interested in donating. Six people were qualified to donate, and two set dates for their altruistic kidney donations. Which means two additional Central New Yorkers will come off the transplant waiting list. Staff at Upstate perform an average of two kidney transplants every week, with the majority of kidneys coming from deceased donors. Currently, living donation is the exception. Gruessner intends to build a program where living donation becomes the rule. When Gruessner completed the transplant from Adams to Fitzpatrick in May, he came to the waiting room to find their families. “What your daughter, Jody, is doing,” he began, “she really is a hero. If we had more people like her, more people would not be on dialysis.” Continued next page

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U P S TAT E H E A LT H

upstate.edu l fall 2016


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