The games will be held at BBVA Compass Stadium, the George R. Brown Convention Center and various other facilities throughout the City of Houston.
Friday, November 08, 2013
U.S. Transplant Games 2014 - July 11-15
The games will be held at BBVA Compass Stadium, the George R. Brown Convention Center and various other facilities throughout the City of Houston.
Monday, August 19, 2013
Heart-Lung Transplant woman to compete in first sport event
Stories like Natasha's give me great joy because they show that it is possible to return to a normal healthy life and participate in sports after an organ transplant. Transplant games help to celebrate the triumph of the human spirit and they provide organ transplant recipients with an opportunity to show that organ donation and transplants work.

Natasha Rogers with her Mum, Ann, and Dad, Graham.
By Ian.Gallagher@northantsnews.co.uk
Aug 18, 2013
Friday, August 09, 2013
Irish team returns from World Transplant Games with 34 medals
In total, the team members won an impressive 12 gold medals, 10 silver and 12 bronze.
Our hosts put on a spectacular week that brought together inspiring people from all over the world to celebrate the gift of life through sport and demonstrate that organ donation and transplantation works.
It’s wonderful to be here with such a wonderful team and it’s fantastic to see them all competing to the best of their abilities.
Read: Pride and anticipation as transplant athletes head to World Transplant Games
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Middle East Transplant Games December 14-15, 2012
Under the patronage of Her Highness Sheikha Fatima bint Mubarak, Chairperson of General Women’s Union, Supreme President of the Family Development Foundation, and President of the Supreme Council for Motherhood and Childhood.
Abu Dhabi will host the 13th Congress of the Middle East Society for Organ Transplantation (MESOT) from the 12th to 15th of December 2012 at the Jumeirah Etihad Towers. This is the first time in the history of the congress that the medical symposium and Transplant Games will be held in the United Arab Emirates. This high profile event is expected to attract hundreds of experts in the field of Organ Transplantation from the region and the rest of the world and is under the patronage of Her Highness Sheikha Fatima bint Mubarak, Chairperson of General Women’s Union, Supreme President of the Family Development Foundation, and President of the Supreme Council for Motherhood and Childhood.
The 13th MESOT Congress will feature a three-day scientific medical congress and two days of the Middle East Transplant Games. Organ donors and recipients will take part in the games with both men and women competing for Transplant Game medals.
HE Saif Bader Al Qubaisi, Chairman of Abu Dhabi Health Services Co. (SEHA) says: ‘SEHA is delighted to be the lead supporting organization for the congress. This leadership role highlights SEHA’s commitment to providing advanced quality health care to residents of the UAE. “SEHA is committed to delivering the highest standard of health services, protecting the population and providing advanced care and treatment, as well as educating the public on healthy living”. We continue to build links with regional health institutions and institutes that use globally recognized superior applications for healthcare delivery as per the directives of HH President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al Nahyan.’
MESOT will kick off with an opening ceremony on the night of the 12th December and will be followed by three days of an intensive and exciting scientific program showcasing the latest knowledge and technical know-how on a large number of topics including Transplantation in MESOT Countries. Experts will share their knowledge on the challenges they are currently facing and will in the future. Some topics of discussion include initiatives to prevent organ failure, methods to improve organ transplant outcomes and success, the creation of systems of organ allocation and procurement, and the latest advancement in the transplantation of different organs such as kidney, liver, heart, lung, intestines and bone marrow. The congress will also feature sessions on stem cell research and its application in the treatment of organ failure, such as failure of the pancreas leading to diabetes. Additionally, pre-congress courses and workshops will provide hands on experience and improve the knowledge and skills of attendees in essential areas of transplantation, including Transplant Histopathology and Histocompatibility, Transplant Immunology and the preparation of patients for transplantation.
Mr. Carl Stanifer, CEO of SEHA, reinforced SEHA’s commitment to the medical congress as an opportunity for the clinical community to take advantage of the experience and skills that will help in the improvement and development of health services provided by SEHA for members of our society.
HE Noura Al Suwaidi, Director General Women’s Union spoke on the issue: “Sheikha Fatima Bint Mubarak, Mother of the Emirates, is giving this conference her utmost attention and has kindly sponsored and embraced the principles and objectives it emphasizes. Treatment of organ failure by safe and ethical transplant has a high rate for successful outcomes. Recipients and donors can have a full recovery through rehabilitation and become active contributors in their communities. Families also have an opportunity to experience restoration of hope, as organ failure does not only affect the patient, but those who share in the personal struggles and triumphs of the journey to improved health.”
One of the key supporters of the event is H.E. Lt (r) General Mohammed Hilal Al Kaabi, Chairman of the Armed Forces Officer’s Club. The Armed Forces Officers Club will provide full support to the symposium and host the sporting event at the Officers’ Club in Abu Dhabi. He comments, “This event supports the importance of sports and fitness in daily life and its role in the prevention of hospitalization and subsequent treatment of disease. A healthy lifestyle is the vision and mission of every sports institution.”
H.E. Mohamed Fadel Al Hamli, Secretary General of the Zayed Higher Organization for Humanitarian Care and Special Needs (ZHO) welcomed the news of the conference. “ZHO supports the theme of the congress and its principle message, which centers on finding optimal treatment for patients with organ failure, along with rehabilitation that enables recipients and donors to reintegrate into their communities with an opportunity to lead a completely normal life”.
Dr. Ali Abdulkareem Al Obaidli, Consultant Transplant Nephrologist, Chair of the National Organ Transplant Committee, Group Chief Clinical Affairs Officer at SEHA, as well as President of the Conference, announced that the conference will offer the opportunity to exchange experiences among participants and encourage the building of integrated medical services in the field of organ transplants between countries in the region, as is the case in Europe and North America. “This conference will provide an unparalleled opportunity for the exchange of information on scientific discoveries, present and future, and provide grounds for concerted efforts to develop ways to prevent organ failure and improve the results of organ donors and recipients alike. In addition, this conference is an opportunity for participants from countries around the region to be exposed to the UAE’s achievements and outstanding efforts in the field of health care”.
Dr. Mohammad Hassan, Consultant Nephrologist at Sheikh Khalifa Medical City, is also the Chairman of the Sports Committee of the Middle East Transplant Games. He is overseeing the 4th session of the Middle East Transplant Games (METG), which will be held in parallel with the conference. Participants in these games are both organ recipients and donors. They will compete in four different sports - running, swimming, table tennis and bowling. The Games will be held on 14th and 15th December and will be open to the public. For the first time in the history of these games in the Middle East, women have been invited to participate in the competition. The goal of the METG is to celebrate the physical fitness of those patients who have undergone organ transplants and their ability to participate and compete in these sports. It is hoped that the example of these people living healthy active lives will encourage the culture of donation and thereby increase donation rates, as well as promoting the full rehabilitation of the patients. These games are designed to prepare the participants to compete in the World Federation of Transplant Patients Games, which adopts the same principles.
Friday, May 11, 2012
British Transplant Games 2013 return to Sheffield August 15 to 18, 2013.

descend on Sheffield next year when the annual
British Transplant Games come to the city
for the second time in five years.
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Canadian Transplant Games, Calgary, Alberta July 16-22, 2012.
The Canadian Transplant Association will celebrate its 25th anniversary in 2012 and the Games will immediately follow Calgary’s (100th) Centennial Stampede (July 6–15, 2012). Athletic competitions will beheld in all age categories for track & field, athletics, swimming, tennis, table tennis, badminton, race walking, 5-pin & 10-pin bowling, lawn bowl, golf, cycling and more including group events like volleyball and the very popular East-versus-West Canada Cup. Schedule of Events. Registration Package (sign-up by April 15h for discount pricing).
Save the date, July 16-22, 2012 and visit The Canadian Transplant Association web site for details about the games as they become available. If you have any questions about the Games or would like to donate, please contact Jennifer Holman at jenniferholman@txworks.ca or Jody Yakubowski at jyakubowski@shaw.ca. If you would
like information about volunteering, please contact CTAGames@shaw.ca.
Calgary is famous for its Western hospitality and they can’t wait to welcome all to this exciting event – a chance to show the world that organ donation really does work; a chance to honor the donors and donor families; a chanceto make memories that will last a lifetime.
About the Canadian Transplant Association (CTA)
The CTA a registered non-profit organization (Charitable tax No. 13181 5862 RR0001) comprised of transplant recipients, athletes, and volunteers dedicated to promoting organ donation through public advocacy and events including the National Transplant Games and World Transplant Games.
Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
MICHIGAN GROUP TO HOST 2012 TRANSPLANT GAMES
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.—In late August, the West Michigan Sports Commission said it will host the Transplant Games of America to take place July 28-31, 2012, at Grand Valley State University.
The purpose of the Transplant Games of America is to spread the message about the importance of organ donation and the second chance of life.
“We applaud all efforts that help create awareness about giving the gift of life,” said Michigan Secretary of State Ruth Johnson Johnson. “With 3,000 people in Michigan alone on waiting lists for organs, the need is critical. So many lives could be saved.”
Tentative sporting events include: 5K run, badminton, basketball, cycling, golf, swimming, table tennis, tennis, track & field and volleyball. The only events that will not be held on GVSU’s campus are bowling and racquetball which will be located at different venues.
Since 1990, the National Kidney Foundation (NKF) hosted a biennial Olympic-style event to showcase the success of transplantation, promote health and fitness for transplant recipients and recognize and honor donor families and living donors. However, in May, the National Kidney Foundation (NKF) suspended the 2012 U.S. Transplant Games.
"For 20 years the NKF U.S. Transplant Games have educated the public about the life-saving power of organ donation and dramatically demonstrated that those with transplants can and do lead normal and active lives,” NKF CEO John Davis said in a news release. “But the Games represent a multi-million dollar expense for the foundation that also requires a significant commitment of staff resources.
"Now, when most Americans view transplantation as almost routine surgery that restores life, we will re-examine the format and financial structure of the Games, to achieve maximum impact and to ensure sustainability going forward,” he continued. “As always, we will work with a range of constituents and supporters to accomplish this."
Transplant Games of America founder TJ Maciak was adamant in continuing the games. “These Transplant Games are special to many people. The games are like a big transplant family reunion and due to the way the event was originally cancelled for 2012; I could not sit back and do nothing. I made it my own personal mission to try to find a way to make these games happen. and I knew West Michigan would be perfect community to pull this amazing feat off,” Maciak said.
Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Liver recipient wins big at transplant games
Naomi Smith brings home the gold
Driffield Times Post, UK
For most athletes bringing back one medal from a world championship would be reason enough to celebrate.
But College student Naomi Smith, 18, has scooped no less than seven medals in two major national and international transplant games, taking her overall medal haul to a staggering 39 in six years.
Naomi, who underwent a liver transplant as a baby, took gold in the 100m relay race while competing in the adult category (18-29) for the first time at the 18th World Transplant Games in Göteborg, Sweden.
She also brought home bronze in the cycling 5Km time trial while competing as part of the 120 strong UK transplant team.
“It was really good because it was my first year in the adult category. In the other World Games and certainly in the British Games you knew the people you were up against.
“The 100m is a highly contested competition and I didn’t think I would get anything but I was literally about a 100th of a second off getting a gold,” said Naomi.
“The 100m finish was unbelievable, my leg was in front of hers but her shoulders were in front of mine and it’s the shoulders that count,” she added.
And two weeks ago Naomi proved once again why she is at the top of her game when she took two gold medals for javelin and long jump at the British Transplant Games held in Belfast.
Naomi, of Nafferton, also won three silver medals at the British Games in the 100m race, 200m race and cycling 5K time trial.
“I have 39 medals in total from the Games. My dad has put lots of hooks up in my bedroom to hang them on but I’m running out of hooks now,” said Naomi who is now setting her sights on the next World Games in South Africa in 2013.
“Going to South Africa will be pretty amazing really. For now it will just be training and trying to get a bit fitter for that,” said Naomi who will start her fund-raising for the trip once she has completed her national diploma in sport at Hull College next year.
And once her studies are finished Naomi hopes to help others improve their fitness and lead healthier lifestyles as a personal trainer.
“I would love to help people get as fit as I am. It’s not like it’s a career where nobody needs it, there is always somebody that will need help whether to lose weight or getting healthier,” she said.
to become an organ and tissue donor
Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”
Thursday, May 19, 2011
NKF suspends U.S. Transplant Games in 2012
The National Kidney Foundation will not be hosting the U.S. Transplant Games in 2012.
Nephrology News & Issues
"For 20 years the NKF U.S. Transplant Games have educated the public about the life-saving power of organ donation and dramatically demonstrated that those with transplants can and do lead normal and active lives," said NKF CEO John Davis. "But the Games represent a multi-million dollar expense for the foundation that also requires a significant commitment of staff resources."
"Now when most Americans view transplantation as almost routine surgery that restores life, we will re-examine the format and financial structure of the Games, to achieve maximum impact and to ensure sustainability going forward. As always, we will work with a range of constituents and supporters to accomplish this."
Since 1990, the biennial Olympic-style event has served to showcase the success of transplantation, promote health and fitness for transplant recipients and recognize and honor donor families and living donors.
"We want to thank the thousands of transplant athletes, living donors, donor families, medical professionals, supportive family members and volunteers who have worked so hard to make the NKF U.S. Transplant Games so successful over the years," says NKF Senior Vice President for Programs Gigi Politoski.
"Special thanks to the dozens of corporate sponsors for their support of the Games and our athletes. We could not have conducted the U.S. Transplant Games for 20 years without their generosity and enthusiasm and look forward to their continuing participation and partnership as we explore ways to restructure the Games."
recipients, and donor families can also access the NKF Cares patient information help line.
The NKF encourages people to send comments and suggestions to tgames@kidney.org
"For 20 years the NKF U.S. Transplant Games have educated the public about the life-saving power of organ donation and dramatically demonstrated that those with transplants can and do lead normal and active lives," said NKF CEO John Davis. "But the Games represent a multi-million dollar expense for the foundation that also requires a significant commitment of staff resources."
"Now when most Americans view transplantation as almost routine surgery that restores life, we will re-examine the format and financial structure of the Games, to achieve maximum impact and to ensure sustainability going forward. As always, we will work with a range of constituents and supporters to accomplish this."
Since 1990, the biennial Olympic-style event has served to showcase the success of transplantation, promote health and fitness for transplant recipients and recognize and honor donor families and living donors.
"We want to thank the thousands of transplant athletes, living donors, donor families, medical professionals, supportive family members and volunteers who have worked so hard to make the NKF U.S. Transplant Games so successful over the years," says NKF Senior Vice President for Programs Gigi Politoski.
"Special thanks to the dozens of corporate sponsors for their support of the Games and our athletes. We could not have conducted the U.S. Transplant Games for 20 years without their generosity and enthusiasm and look forward to their continuing participation and partnership as we explore ways to restructure the Games."
recipients, and donor families can also access the NKF Cares patient information help line.
The NKF encourages people to send comments and suggestions to tgames@kidney.org
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Liver patient wins 60 gold medals since transplant
By Christine Lavelle Deadlines Scotland
A WOMAN who had to have a partial liver transplant when she was just nine years old is getting to represent Scotland in a Commonwealth fencing competition.
Anna Burnett, 25, from Ratho in Edinburgh, spent most of her childhood under a blue light, after she was diagnosed with Crigler-Najjar Syndrome shortly after she was born.
The rare condition, which causes jaundice, left her without a vital enzyme in the liver used to breakdown the waste material bilirubin – which can cause irreversible brain damage if it is left to build up.
For almost 10 years Ms Burnett had to spend hours of her day under a blue light designed to break down the toxin and process her blood, with the amount of time spent under the light increasing with her body mass.
But – her life has turned around since then, as she has gone on to become the most successful transplant athlete of all time, with somewhere in the region of 60 gold medals for swimming and sprinting competitions.
And now she is gearing up to represent her country in Melbourne at the Commonwealth Fencing Open Championships.
The tournament is held separately but at the same time as the Commonwealth Games as fencing is no longer included.
Ms Burnett said: “It feels like such an achievement being able to represent my country in a mainstream international event, and not as a transplant athlete.
“I can’t wait to get going.
“I spent so long have to be in the house, under the lights, that when I was well enough to do sport properly, I just wanted to give it my all.
“As I got bigger I had to spend more and more time under the lights, because obviously I had more body mass, so it was from 7pm to 7am, and then I would have to come home from school at lunch time.
“It was quite restrictive and any time I spent outside was really special.”
At the time there were only full liver transplant operations available, and Ms Burnett says he parents were not keen on putting her through it.
But, when she was about eight years old things started to get difficult.
She said: “I was getting increasingly frustrated about not being able to go out.
“So when they heard there was now a partial operation, a graft, it was agreed I should have one, so I went on the waiting list.
“I waited six months and just before my tenth birthday I had the operation.
“I know my liver came from a little boy, but that’s all.
“When it was the tenth anniversary, I wrote to the hospital asking if I could send flowers to his parents and they passed on a letter.”
Ms Burnett, who will spend the rest of her like taking anti-rejection medication, said she knew straight away that she wanted to get involved in sport.
She said: “I was desperate to make up for lost time.
“It’s hard to say whether I would be so competitive if I hadn’t had my liver problem.
“All I know is that when I was well enough I felt so bored sitting on the sofa.”
When she entered her first Transplant Games competition, aged 11, Ms Burnett won every competition she entered, earning her the Best Newcomer Award.
After turning 18 she moved up to the adult games and concentrated on running, and two years ago at the European Games in Germany she scooped the 200m race and broke a World Record for the 400m.
But, after a while Ms Burnett said she felt as though she had taken the running as far as she could, and decided to opt for a change.
She said: “I had done some fencing at school and loved it, so when I was at university I joined the club.
“The coach there, Brandon Lim, said to me I could be in the Commonwealth squad, and I thought he was joking.
“I now train in London at least three days a week.
“I have broken into the top 50 and won silver in the Highland Open last year and I was third in the Scottish Fencing Open in January.
“I don’t know what to expect in Melbourne, but you have to go aiming for the top.”
Ms Burnett, who completed a course in fashion design at the Edinburgh College of Art and now runs her own dress-making business, said she is looking forward to the challenge that competing in a mainstream event will bring.
She said: “The Transplant Games are competitive, but there are people there doing it just because they can.
“In mainstream events though, everyone is competing to win.
“It would be amazing to represent Scotland in Glasgow at the next games.”
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Woman whose lungs collapsed 15 times wins gold at transplant games
and will compete in British Transplant Games in August
By Daily Mail Reporter at daily mail online
A former fitness instructor who defied death after a one-in-a-million lung disease put her in a coma, has gone on to win gold at an international sports event.
Justine Laymond battled back from the brink after her lungs collapsed 15 TIMES.
She became a track and field star after receiving a life-saving double lung transplant.
Justine took home six medals at the European Heart and Lung Transplant Games last month.
She also competed in the badminton, squash, as well as sprinting, long jump and the relay. And now she plans to compete all over again this month.
She said: 'I used to be really into fitness and I worked in a gym. It was awful to know that my body was wasting away and there was nothing I could do.
'By July when I had my transplant I was close to death. I had nothing left to give and doctors were amazed that I had survived so long.
'The double lung transplant could not have come soon enough for me. But after the operation the difference I felt in myself was incredible. For the first time in several years I could breathe without effort.
'It took me a while to get back to peak fitness but now I feel on top of the world.
'I'm really proud of my achievements and especially my gold medal. I can't wait for the next contest.'
The feisty 37-year-old started to have problems with her lungs when she was 21 and suffered two lung collapses in her early twenties.
It took ten years and a further lung collapse before doctors diagnosed the incredibly rare condition Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) in 2005.
Soon after the diagnosis Justine took a turn for the worse. Within just eight months her left lung collapsed a further 13 times.
Eventually Justine was hospitalized for six months in February 2006 while she waited for a transplant.
Unable to eat, walk, drink or eat, her body was deteriorating fast. She was on oxygen 24 hours a day and was put into a coma for three weeks.
Finally, in July 2006, Justine received a new pair of lungs from a donor and has been rebuilding her life ever since.
Her journey back to health culminated in her bringing home gold for Britain in the European Heart and Lung Transplant Games which were held in Sweden.
Justine said: 'I know because of my illness I can't take life for granted. I've been on such a rollercoaster journey and I now I try and live every day to the fullest.
'I started to have certain symptoms when I was around 20 years old. But at the time I had no idea that there was anything seriously wrong.
'It wasn't until my left lung collapsed in April 2005 that I had a CT scan. I expected that something was seriously wrong, but nothing could have prepared me for what I was told.
I was told that I was in the 'end stage' of the disease Lymphangioleiomyomatosis, and my world just fell apart.
'I listened in disbelief as the doctors told me that my right lung had completely failed and my left lung only had about 30 per cent lung capacity.
'I was in an incredibly dark place and that time still haunts me to this day. I knew I had to stay alive though- I never gave up.'
Now Justine's future looks bright with a number of planned athletic events.
She said: 'I'll be competing in the British Transplant Games in August playing squash, as well as sprinting, badminton, long jump and the relay. I can't believe how far I've come.'
LAM is an extremely rare condition that affects around one person in a million.
The disease affects a certain type of muscle cell and only occurs in women. Just 60 people in the UK are known to have it.
The condition causes an overgrowth of a certain types of cell. This overgrowth occurs around the airways and also around the blood vessels and the lymph vessels, which usually drain excess fluids from the lungs.
The cells lead to cysts developing in the lung which can be detected by taking a CT scan of the lung.
For more information visit the LAM Action website
Sunday, September 06, 2009
Adversity nothing new for teen at World Transplant Games
A tire on Mike Mazzuocco's costly road bicycle was about to go flat minutes before his race at the World Transplant Games last week.
Luckily, he found a $5 solution.
The St. Catharines teen, who competed in the games 20 months after a double-lung transplant, wrapped an Australian five dollar bill around his punctured tire and cycled to a personal best time in the 20- kilometer race at the games down under.
The puncture was the latest in a series of bike malfunctions leading up to the race -- with the last problem discovered during the seven-minute race warm-up.
"It came down to the wire," said the West Park Secondary School student, who arrived home from Australia earlier this week. "I probably should have kept (the $5 bill). I think I could have used it to buy hot chocolate on the way home."
The determined 18-year-old managed personal bests in both his races at the Games -- about 52 minutes for the 20-kilometer race and 11 minutes, 11 seconds for his five-kilometer competition.
His equipment problems started early, with a blown front tire that was completely replaced before his first race. The other tire went flat twice in the hours before his 20-kilometer race. An Australian team captain pumped it up once; a Canadian member later replaced the inner tube.
The same friendly Australian suggested the final emergency fix. It turns out Australian bills are "a bit plasticky," said Mazzuocco. The durable dollar-wrap prevented another puncture and allowed the teen to race.
It was a "hairy-scary" situation, said Mazzuocco's mom, Jeannie. "A woman from Team SickKids was filming the whole thing, and she was almost crying."
Mazzuocco had already dealt with two-wheeled adversity on his way to the games. In late May, a thief stole Mazzuocco's training bike from a Tim Hortons. A city resident later found and returned the bike after seeing a Standard story on the theft.
It was just a bump in the road, however, compared to the challenge of recovering from a double lung transplant in 2007 due to cystic fibrosis -- then training to race in the Canadian Transplant Games in Windsor.
Mazzuocco won the timed five-kilometer trials at those games and began preparing for a 20-kilometer race on Australia's Gold Coast.
"To do what he did, 20 months after surgery, we're very proud," said his mom.
Mazzuocco is proud, too -- and grateful for the opportunity to compete and meet other athletes.
The Canadian Team was made up 48 athletes who have had heart, lung, kidney and liver transplants. They earned more than 70 medals at the games.
"It was fun, and great to see friends I made at the last games," said Mazzuocco, who is still recovering from the 20 hours of return flight. "Everyone was friendly... everyone shares something in common."
To see how the team fared between Aug. 22 and 30, visit http://www.sickkids.ca/teamsickkids.
“You Have the Power to Save Lives – Sign Your Donor Card & Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”
Register to be a donor in Ontario or Download Donor Cards from Trillium Gift of Life Network. NEW for Ontario: recycleMe.org - Learn The Ins & Outs Of Organ And Tissue Donation. Register Today! For other Canadian provinces click here
In the United States, be sure to find out how to register in your state at ShareYourLife.org or Download Donor Cards from OrganDonor.Gov
In Great Britain, register at NHS Organ Donor Register
In Australia, register at Australian Organ Donor Register
Your generosity can save up to eight lives with heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestine transplants. One tissue donor can help up to 100 other people by donating skin, corneas, bone, tendon, ligaments and heart valves
Has your life been saved by an organ transplant? "Pay it forward" and help spread the word about the need for organ donation - In the U.S. another person is added to the national transplant waiting list every 11 minutes and 18 people die each day waiting for an organ transplant.
Monday, June 22, 2009
Heart recipient readies for world games in Australia - needs financial help to get there
Posted By PETER DOWNS, STANDARD STAFF, St. Catharines, Ontario
The 13-year-old boy watches intently as his dad tells the story of his son's heart transplant when he was a baby.
"Oh, you're going to cry again," Jacob Kingdon Kramer tells his father, sitting right up against him on a couch in the living room of the family's Vineland home.
Boris Kramer smiles at his son and carries on about the heart from someone else's body that beats in his son's chest.
And when he gets to the part about the joy Jacob and his parents get out of attending the World Transplant Games, the tears well in Kramer's eyes.
"It's still emotional," he says. "It's an amazing experience to see people encourage another person. It's about life. It's about people enjoying each other."
The games also allow the family to get together with hundreds of other families who understand exactly what they've gone through.
Jacob, a Grade 7 student at St. Edward School in Jordan, was born with a condition that wouldn't allow his heart to pump properly. A fraternal twin brother died in the uterus of the same condition. His mother, Jennifer, had an emergency caesarean section five weeks before her due date and Jacob was put on a heart transplant list.
At five months old, he received a heart transplant, but the organ had been damaged by ice during transport. Jacob was then put on the top of the list in North America and three days later received a second transplant.
He will need to take anti-rejection medication for the rest of his life and has battled a number of related medical problems.
But those daily medical issues take a backseat at the games, where everyone involved celebrates the life-saving gift of transplants, Kramer says.
Held every other year, the international event draws close to 2,000 organ recipients of all ages who compete in a variety of sports.
The event aims to raise awareness of the continuing need for organ donation.
"It doesn't really matter how people perform," Kramer says. "At the end, everyone is cheering for that one person to finish. It's amazing."
Two years ago, Jacob competed in the world games in Thailand. He's also participated in national versions of the event, which are held in alternating years.
He's slated to compete in three events -- badminton, ping pong and long jump -- in this summer's world games, which run from Aug. 22-30 near Brisbane, Australia.
The majority of families who participate rely on fundraising to cover their travel expenses.
Jacob and his parents are trying to raise the approximately $9,000 it will cost them to attend the event. They're roughly halfway towards their target.
Jacob's school and other groups have organized fundraisers on the family's behalf to help out.
Donations can also be made online by logging on to www.kramersculptures.com and following the link.
To find out more about the Transplant Games in Australia click here.
“You Have the Power to Save Lives – Sign Your Donor Card & Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”
Register to be a donor in Ontario or Download Donor Cards from Trillium Gift of Life Network
recycleMe.org NEW Ontario donor campaign
Learn The Ins & Outs Of Organ And Tissue Donation. Register Today!
For other Canadian provinces click here
In the United States, be sure to find out how to register in your state at ShareYourLife.org or Download Donor Cards from OrganDonor.Gov
In Great Britain, register at NHS Organ Donor Register
In Australia, register at Australian Organ Donor Register
Your generosity can save up to eight lives with heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestine transplants. One tissue donor can help up to 100 other people by donating skin, corneas, bone, tendon, ligaments and heart valves




