http://www.wausaudailyherald.com/article/20100810/WDH06/8100329/COLUMN-Transplant-Games-a-success

Green Bay
As the tour rolls on, Green Bay becomes the next host city. The tour stopped at the Bay Park Square Mall to hear more stories of life-saving gifts and life-changing decisions. Hillary Sweere shared her son, Rece’s, story. When he was only three days old, Rece needed a new heart. Sweere said it was a very difficult time and she was fearful an organ wouldn’t come in time for her son. But eight days later, he was given a new heart. She said the family tried to stay optimistic the entire time, because it was the only way they could get through it. Rece stood by her side today while she spoke at the event.
A picture of Teresa Paulus' son, Brian, stood by her side in Green Bay as she shared his story. Brian was only three years old when he drowned while camping. It happened 15 years ago. Brian’s mother pointed out he would have been graduating high school this year.
“I can’t go to his graduation,” she said. “But I can tell everybody about Brian and what a great boy he was and how proud we are of him.” Brian’s family chose to donate his organs. His eyes and heart valves gave others a second chance.
“Brian didn’t have a choice to live,” Paulus said. “But we had the chance to donate to help other children live.”
For the 15 years since Brian’s death, Teresa has been spreading the word on the importance of organ donation. She calls the work her passion.
“Donation is a good thing for families left behind,” said Paulus.
Other Team Wisconsin members who stopped by took turns telling stories as well. I’m not able to fit everyone’s stories in here, so like I said in my introductory blog, feel free to share your stories on the comment board for this blog. I think it would be really neat for this to become a collection of stories of triumph, perseverance, hardship and healing. Whatever your connection may be to organ donation, the Games or anyone I mention in the blogs feel free to share. Even if it’s just that you yourself are a registered organ donor, or you think the Transplant Games sound fun, everyone is welcome here.
Links to media coverage:
WFRV-TV
http://www.wfrv.com/news/local/96099689.html
WBAY-TV
http://www.wbay.com/Global/story.asp?S=12630843
Appleton
Right next door to Green Bay, Appleton became the next site for the Legacy of Life Tour. The event was held at the Paper Discovery Center, a really neat place that you can actually take tours of, which seem pretty interesting.
Teresa Paulus traveled to Appleton after Green Bay and again told the story of her son Brian and the choice she made to donate his organs after he passed away at the age of three.
Anne Grahl was also at the event with her seven-year-old son Mason. Mason and his mom will be going to the Games at the end of July for Mason to compete! He received a kidney donation from his own mother about four years ago.
Links to media coverage:
WHBY-AM 1150
One of the really neat people I met at the Marshfield event was Richard Koch. Koch is on the Board of Directors for the Lions Eye Bank of WI (LEBW) and one of the FIRST to sign up on the online registry. He said he knew it was coming out because of a press conference he had been informed about, so back in March he kept checking online to see if it was a go yet. The first day it was up he happened to be checking, saw it, grabbed his driver’s license (all you need to sign up) and got in on the online registry. Koch said his wife’s sister was an organ donor and just two years ago his cousin received a kidney transplant, both of those things, along with being part of the LEBW, have made him very aware of the importance of organ donation.
“It’s important to sign up on the online registry because there’s a long list of people waiting for organ donations,” said Koch. “And there are a lot of people on that list that never get an organ because there aren’t enough. Being on the online registry makes it easier for family in a hard time so they don’t’ have to make the decision of whether or not to have their loved one’s organs donated on their own.”
I included a picture of Koch at the computer showing me how he signed up back in March.
Another very sweet person we met in Marshfield was Bill Reigel. Reigel had a heart attack back in July of 1979 when he was only 40 years old. After the heart attack he recovered and was doing well, but then went into cardiac arrest in an airport in New York when he was leaving a convention in 1987. He told me that from then on his heart just kept getting worse so he got moved up on the list. On May 12 1992, his deceased father’s birthday no less, he received a working heart.
“It has been an awesome experience,” said Reigel. “I have seen my family grow.”
Two weeks ago he and his wife celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary! Congrats to both you and your wife, Bill! :)
There was no donor family member to speak at this event, but the quilt panel on display did have a patch recognizing a Marshfield native, Kristina Jane Marty. Marty was 16 when she passed away.
Her patch says, “We loved her so much but God loved and wanted her more.”
I included a picture of Kristina’s patch.
I also have a picture of Reigel presenting an LEBW member with another panel of the quilt.
Links to media coverage:
Marshfield News Herald
http://www.marshfieldnewsherald.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=20106100396
This marks the end of the fourth event! June 10th the Legacy Tour will be in Green Bay and Appleton. If you’re in the area I hope you can join up with the tour for the day!
A lot of Team Wisconsin members have used these events to get hooked up with other team members in the area. In Wausau team members exchanged contact information and were planning a time to get together so if you can make it to one of the tour’s in your area it would be really fun to get team groups together!
Here’s the rest of the schedule in case you haven’t seen it:
Thursday, June 10th - Green Bay and Appleton
Monday, June 14th - Kenosha
Tuesday, June 15th – Janesville
Tuesday, June 22nd - Milwaukee
Wednesday, June 23rd - Madison
Lee Belmas spoke at the event as a recipient. He was diagnosed with Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis (PSC) years ago. For those of you out there like me, who had no idea what this was, Belmas explained to me that it is a disease that eventually turns into cancer, “a ‘when’, not an ‘if’” as he told me. In October of 2006 doctors found a tumor on his liver. He began chemo and radiation. But when Belmas got an infection in his blood he had to be transported to a Madison hospital, and after an exploratory surgery, which found the cancer was confined to his liver making a transplant a possibility, he was put on the waiting list to receive a new liver. Just three weeks after being put on the list, Jan. 31, 2007 he was given that gift. His family got to share the birth of two of his grandchildren with him. Belmas was also there for his son’s wedding, major events he likely would not have been a part of without a transplant. Belmas has written his donor family but never received an answer. He said if he did get to speak with them he would want to say, “Thank you for sharing your loved one with me and giving me a second chance at life. You’ll forever be in my heart.”
Cindy Geiss also spoke at the event to share her family’s experience with organ donation. Geiss’ husband, Gordy Miller, died from an aneurysm and because his family knew his wishes to be an organ donor, they were able to make that decision easier at such a hard time.
“It’s important to communicate with your family on your wishes,” she said.
Geiss and Belmas both presented a panel from Patches of Love: The National Donor Quilt to the Lions Eye Bank of Wisconsin. I included a picture of the presentation with this blog.
I also am including a picture of the transplant recipients from the Wausau area standing with Geiss by the quilt. From left to right is Ted Gerbig, Alex (I’m sorry Alex I misplaced your last name), Cindy Geiss, Lee Belmas and Alex’s dad.
Links to media coverage:
Hello Team Wisconsin and Friends,
My name is Emily Rohloff and I am a volunteer with the 2010 National Kidney Foundation U.S. Transplant GamesR. I am going to be blogging from now through the event, bringing you stories of inspiration, perseverance and triumph from donor family members, living donors, transplant recipients, volunteers and friends all touched by these life-saving gifts. I am very excited to get started and hope that no matter where you are or what you're up to in these last eight weeks before the Games, you'll take some time out of your busy schedule to join me in sharing this experience.
As you may or may not know, there will be a Legacy Tour throughout Wisconsin, starting today, June 8th, leading up to the Games. We'll be traveling to various cities throughout the state showcasing panels of Patches of Love: The National Donor Quilt. In each city on our tour we'll hear from donor family members and recipients. They'll share their stories and we'll pay tribute to the one or more Wisconsin donors represented on the quilt panel.
Now, since we can't all make it to each stop on the statewide tour, I'll be keeping everyone updated on the events. Think of me as your online tour guide for the Legacy Tour. I'll keep us all in the loop on who spoke at the event, share a little of their story, as well as links to media coverage.
You'll be able to find my blog on the National Kidney Foundation of Wisconsin's site (link below). Along with my blog, I'll be adding inspirational quotes from our speakers to Team Wisconsin's Twitter account, @teamwi.
Feel free to share my blog with your family and friends, the more people we can spread the word to about the Games and the importance of organ, tissue and eye donation the better. Also, let's have fun with it. If you have a story to share you can leave a comment on this blog or on our Facebook page (link below).
Another thing to keep in mind: If you want to get involved in the Games there's still time to join the 5K Run/Walk for Organ, Tissue and Eye Donation that will be held on Saturday, July 31 at 9:00 am. The entire community is invited! Go to www.YesIWillWisconsin.com and click on the run/walk dot.
Together let's help end the wait for the 107,000 men, women and children in the U.S. who are waiting to receive a life-saving organ transplant.
LINKS:
National Kidney Foundation of Wisconsin
Team Wisconsin Facebook Page:
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=60991476210
Follow Team Wisconsin on Twitter @teamwi
(June 3, 2010 – Madison, WI) In less than 60 days, an expected 7,500 visitors from across the country will arrive in Wisconsin to participate in the 2010 U.S. Transplant Games. The Legacy of Life Tour, a statewide tour that will visit 10 cities, officially kicks off the countdown to the Games.
The Legacy Tour acts as a lead-in to the Games, and features a series of community events around the state that will recognize local transplant recipients, living donors and donor families attending the Games as members of Team Wisconsin. In addition, each of the events will include a special presentation of a panel from Patches of Love: The National Donor Quilt.
“Through the Legacy of Life Tour, Wisconsin citizens will be able to witness first-hand the success of transplantation and the life-saving nature of organ and tissue donation within their own communities,” said Cindy Huber, CEO of the National Kidney Foundation of Wisconsin, who is organizing the Legacy Tour.
The U.S. Transplant Games, which come to Madison July 30-August 4, are an Olympic-style event for athletes who have received a life-saving organ transplant of any type (kidney, liver, heart, lung, pancreas and bone marrow). Transplant athletes of all ages will compete for gold, silver and bronze medals in 12 different sports including 5K run/walk, badminton, singles and doubles bowling, basketball, cycling, golf, swimming, singles and doubles tennis, track and field and volleyball.
Special events honoring living and deceased donors are highlights of the Games, as are the Opening and Closing Ceremonies. Presented biennially since 1990 by the National Kidney Foundation, the Games draw participants from across the country who are organized into state teams.
Team Wisconsin boasts more than 600 members, followed by Team Philadelphia with 300 members. More than 1,500 transplant recipient athletes are expected to attend the Games which will bring an estimated economic impact of more than $2.55 million.
The Games are not only for members of the transplant and donation community and are not just another event in Wisconsin. “Even if you don’t have a personal connection to donation, participating in the Games in some way will change you profoundly,” said Krista Flanagan, co-chair of the Games Organizing Committee, noting that more than 1,200 volunteers are needed for the Games and the community is invited to participate in the Games 5K Run/Walk.
Echoing that sentiment is Trey Schwab, a double-lung transplant recipient himself who is the Outreach Coordinator for the UW Health Organ Procurement Organization and also co-chair of the Games Organizing Committee, “I encourage everyone to volunteer for the Games, participate in the 5K and/or attend the Games Opening and Closing Ceremonies.” He added, “At no other event have I ever witnessed such a sense of community, encouragement and just an overall sense of gratitude than at the Transplant Games.”
Hosting the Games, inviting the community to volunteer, attend the Games and participate in the 5K, as well as coordination of the Legacy Tour, all is being done to raise awareness of the critical need for more organ, tissue and eye donors.
Today in the United States, more than 107,000 men, women and children are waiting to receive a life-saving organ transplant. In Wisconsin alone, more than 1,500 of our family members, co-workers and neighbors are waiting.
Sidebars: