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Donor Diaries

by Laurie Lee

Donor Diaries is a podcast about the beauty and messiness of living organ donation. Get ready for some amazing stories about what happens when people decide to share their organs with other people, when people chose to share life. The sharing of kidneys and other organs is an incredibly fascinating topic that teaches a lot about kindness, love, and life! There are over 100,000 people on the kidney transplant waitlist today, and sadly about 13 people die each day waiting for a kidney that they never receive. One in three Americans are at risk for developing chronic kidney disease and one in nine already have kidney disease. Most don’t even know it. Donor Diaries shares unfiltered stories of kidney donation through the voices of living donors and straight talk from transplant experts who are committed to bringing the conversation of living organ donation to the forefront of society, so patients no longer have to die or suffer while waiting for a transplant.

Copyright: © 2024 Donor Diaries

Episodes

Discovering the Unexpected Rewards of Donating a Kidney to a Stranger | EP 25

39m · Published 16 Apr 05:00

Imagine opening your heart to a complete stranger in one of the most profound ways possible. That's exactly what our guests, Josiah Wolfson and Kat Gordon, did when they each made the life-affirming decision to donate a kidney to someone they'd never met. Their compelling stories of self-discovery and transformation are sure to resonate deeply, as they recount the moments that led them to donate.

Josiah, a former lawyer turned spiritual nomad, describes an epic pandemic filled with change and growth, where the serenity of crafting a cob house in South America became a metaphor for rebuilding his own life's purpose. His narrative is a remarkable odyssey from the courtroom to the mountains, culminating in a gift that transcends the self. Kat, on the other hand, brings us into the fold of her own initial skepticism and the journey to understanding the profound impact one person can have. Together, they peel back the layers of their experiences, revealing the personal epiphanies and societal misconceptions that often accompany the complex giving of an organ.

We cap off this inspiring dialogue by examining the unexpected waves made by kidney donations, from the donors' enhanced health and perspectives to the creation of a tightly-knit community—a 'tribe'—bound by their shared altruistic choice. Their narratives illuminate the human capacity for connection, and the life-altering joy that stems from helping someone in need. Listen to the full episode for a heartfelt exploration of the rippling effects of kindness and the unexpected journeys that can unfold when you decide to share your most personal parts, with a stranger.

Show Notes

Living in Paz TicToc
Living in Paz Instagram
Living in Paz YouTube (Espanol)
Living in Paz YouTube (English)
Demonstration of a non-directed donor starting a chain
The Power of non-directed donation (story)
Why we donated kidneys to strangers
What Makes a Person Decide to Donate His Kidney to a Stranger
Patty describing her non-directed donation
how the Family Voucher Program

Donor Diaries Website
Donor Diaries on Facebook

Nutcracker Kidneys with LJ the Medium | EP 24

28m · Published 05 Mar 06:00

LJ Dong, also known as LJ the Medium, embodies resilience and determination in her journey with Nutcracker Syndrome. Despite facing significant health challenges, LJ's refusal to discard her kidney led her on a remarkable path toward organ donation advocacy.

As the American Miss National Mrs. for 2024, LJ leverages her platform to raise awareness about the importance of organ donation. Her diverse background as an ordained Interfaith Minister, Certified Personal Trainer, Certified Sports Nutritionist, Certified Motivational Speaker, Reiki Practitioner, and author underscores her holistic approach to health and wellness.

In her books, "The Spirit of Hope" and "Think Like a Medium, Act Like a Warrior," LJ likely shares insights into her personal struggles and triumphs, inspiring readers to embrace a warrior spirit in facing life's challenges.

Moreover, LJ's starring role in "The LJ Documentary - The Story of a Warrior Spirit" further amplifies her message of resilience and advocacy. By sharing her own story, LJ empowers others to consider the impact of organ donation and the potential for transforming lives through selfless acts of generosity.

Through LJ's advocacy efforts and unwavering determination, she not only raises awareness for Nutcracker Syndrome but also highlights the importance of organ donation, ultimately making a profound difference in the lives of those in need.

2024 Living Donor Meetup in NY
Nutcracker Syndrome Facebook Page
LJ’s Website
Documentary
Instagram
Books by LJ on Amazon

Donor Diaries Website
Donor Diaries on Facebook

Tax Credits Can Save Lives

30m · Published 12 Dec 06:00

Imagine a world where living kidney donors are compensated for their life-saving gift. A world where a severe shortage of kidneys doesn't result in the preventable deaths of over a million Americans. In this riveting dialogue, we're joined by four non-directed kidney donors - Ned Brooks, Elaine Perlman, Dr. Matt Harmody, and Cody Maynard who are the founding members of the Coalition to Modify NOTA. This team will help us uncover the implications of the National Organ Transplant Act (NOTA) of 1984. Together, they propose a life-altering solution that could end the kidney transplant wait list by offering tax credits to donors.

Living kidney donation is the gold standard of kidney care. Living kidneys last on average twice as long as deceased donor kidneys. Only living organ donors can solve the kidney shortage.

One percent of all Federal taxes that are collected is spent on patients in end stage renal disease. Every time someone gets a kidney transplant, an American can not only survive but begin to thrive again while taxpayers save money. In twenty years, the number of living kidney donors declined seven percent while the number of Americans on the kidney wait list doubled. The need for kidneys rises by seven percent per year. One million Americans will have kidney failure by the year 2030.

In today’s podcast episode we will discuss how modifying NOTA could end the transplant wait list.

Show Links

Coalition to Modify NOTA website

Join the Coalition

Bios for the 4 Founders of the Coalition

Most Americans Support Compensating Donors

The Ethics of Transplant by Janet Radcliffe Richards

The Ethics of Rewarding Living Donors symposium video 1, video 2, and video 3

A Cost-Benefit Analysis of Government Compensation of Kidney Donors

Would Government Compensation of Living Kidney Donors Exploit the Poor? An Empirical Analysis

The Terrible Toll of the Kidney Shortage

Removing Disincentives to Kidney Donation: A Quantitative Analysis

Reducing the Shortage of Transplant Kidneys: A Lost Opportunity for the US Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)

The Government Can Save the Lives of more than 40,000 Kidney Failure Patients Each Year by Compensating Living Kidney Donors

Donor Diaries Website
Donor Diaries on Facebook

Diane Lee Reporting Live with 1 Kidney

32m · Published 01 Nov 05:00

Diane Lee Reporting Live with 1 Less Kidney

Diane Lee is an Emmy nominated anchor and two-time Emmy Award winning reporter with more than 20 years of broadcast news experience.

Diane is currently the 7NEWS Consumer Anchor. Her exclusive reports focus on warning them about scams as well as highlighting money saving tips and investigating consumer issues. Diane’s “Here to Help” focus gives her a platform to assist viewers with any issues or questions they have, something that aligns with her desire to uplift others (a value that led her to donate a kidney to a stranger in 2023).

In this episode of Donor Diaries, we get a peek into Diane’s brain, just 3 weeks post-surgery to get a view of what donation looks and feels like right after it happens! Laurie and Diane discuss some of the surprises that can emerge post donation. Not just the physical kind, but the mental and emotional ones that sometimes pop up when we attach to specific outcomes for ourselves or our recipients.


More About Diane

In 2023 Diane won an SCBA Star Award for Investigative Reporting after her story “Before You Sell” helped an Upstate couple save their home. In 2018, she was nominated for Best Anchor among broadcasters throughout the Southeast including the Atlanta market. Prior to that, Diane won a Southeast Regional Emmy Award for a story she did on protecting oneself from identity theft and an Emmy for her investigative story on a debt collection scam.

Before joining WSPA, Diane worked as a weekday morning anchor for FOX23 News in Albany, N.Y., an evening anchor at WYOU, the CBS affiliate in Scranton, Pa, and an Anchor/Reporter at WRNN, a cable news station covering the Hudson Valley counties north of New York City.

In addition to her work in TV news, Diane loves to sing. She performs frequently with the Spartanburg Jazz Ensemble and Spartanburg Community Band. Diane produced a Christmas CD for the Children’s Miracle Network, and the project raised $20,000 for the non-profit in 6 weeks.

Diane graduated from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. She lives in Greenville with her husband, elementary age daughter and middle school age son. She is also an avid jogger and hiker.

Links

Diane’s Website

Diane Lee 7News Consumer Anchor

Diane Lee Here to Help!

NKR Microsites

NKR Donor Shield

Alliance for Paired Kidney Donation

Story that Inspired Diane to Donate

Jamar’s News Story

Living Donors Online

Living Kidney Donors Support Group

Kidney Donor Athletes

Donor Diaries Website
Donor Diaries on Facebook
Crowd Source for Life

Transcending Borders: International Kidney Exchange with Dr. Satish Nadig

38m · Published 02 Aug 05:00

There’s a wide range of reasons why kidney transplant is available to some, but not all.  Imagine the lives that could be saved worldwide if we organized a globally inclusive kidney exchange.  What could be possible if we could break down borders and share kidneys with other countries?

Meet Dr. Satish Nadig, Chief of Transplant, and the Director of the Comprehensive Transplant Center at Northwestern Medicine in Chicago.  He’s an innovator and visionary, and in this episode, we get to pick his brain to learn about Northwestern and the small network of Transplant Centers pioneering an effort to increase transplants through international kidney exchange.   

Kidney failure is a global problem and is among the leading causes of death worldwide.  The kidney shortage is not a problem unique to the United States although it’s perpetuated here by the high occurrence of diabetes and high blood pressure. 
The barriers to transplant in economically developed countries are different from those in developing countries, but regardless, kidney failure in both rich and poor countries is sadly a death sentence for many.  Barriers to patients receiving a kidney transplant should be identified and removed. 

All kidney patients benefit from having access to a large pool of kidney donors.  The bigger the pool, the higher the likelihood of finding a good donor match.  This is especially important for hard to match patients that have high levels of HLA antibodies.  It’s just statistically more difficult for these patients to find a match. 

But many people who need a kidney transplant live in a small country where the pool of donors is small or worse, they might live in a country that doesn’t even have a transplant center.  Other kidney patients might live in a country with restrictions that only allow a direct blood relative to donate- having a friend or stranger donate to them isn’t an option like it is in the United States.  And in some countries, it’s possible to get a transplant, but paired exchanges are not allowed which really limits the patient’s options and access to transplant. 

Join Laurie Lee and Dr. Nadig to learn about the future of International Kidney Exchange at Northwestern Medicine and hear some inspiring stories about the lives already being saved as we start to eliminate the artificial barriers between country lines.

Links:

Northwestern Medicine Organ Transplantation Program: Quality, Innovation, Education
Northwestern Comprehensive Transplant Center
Dr. Satish Nadig Profile
Experimental Strategies in Organ Transplantation with Satish Nadig
Alliance for Paired Kidney Donation
Al Roth on Global Kidney Exchange and More
Global Kidney Exchange: opportunity or exploitation?

Donor Diaries Website
Donor Diaries on Facebook
Crowd Source for Life

Coffee and Kidneys with Al Roth

53m · Published 12 Jul 05:00

Exchanging kidneys is a complicated process that involves multiple collaborations between kidney patients, living donors, transplant centers, insurance companies, airlines and more.  It’s truly remarkable if you stop to think about the number of people and organizations that need to come together to make 1 paired exchange possible.  We only started exchanging kidneys between non-compatible pairs a little over 20 years ago, so it’s a somewhat new process.  Have you ever wondered how this was made possible?

Meet Nobel Laureate Al Roth who is an economist and Stanford University professor.  Al designs markets.  He’s one of the prominent players who has made kidney exchange possible.  In a nutshell, his work has revolutionized kidney exchange around the world by using economic theory to make kidneys more available.

In October 2012, Al was the co-recipient of the 2012 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, together with Lloyd S. Shapley, for “ the theory of stable allocations and the practice of market design."

Al Roth is well known for his application of economics to real world problems.  In this podcast episode we touch a wide range of topics ranging from paired exchanges, prostitution, surrogacy, and more.  All of these markets are examples of repugnant markets.  Kidney Donation can be characterized as a repugnant market, and Al will tell us all about it! 

Show Notes

Abundant/ CrowdSource for Life Film
Al Roth’s Blog
Al Roth’s Website
Freakonomics Make Me a Match Episode with Al Roth

Donor Diaries Website
Donor Diaries on Facebook
Crowd Source for Life

The Bionic Man

32m · Published 07 Jun 06:00

Meet Phillip Hanks, a walking miracle!  

Philip had his first liver transplant in 2007 and lived an active life. Then in 2019, extreme pain sent him back to the hospital where he received horrifying news. Not only did he need a new liver, but he needed a new stomach, intestines, pancreas, and kidney.  Two different transplant centers turned him away before Indiana University accepted his case and agreed to try the risky surgery which basically involved removing all of his organs and replacing them with donor organs.  

Phillip not only survived but is thriving after a 5-organ transplant during the pandemic.  Join Laurie and Philip for a riveting story about hope, faith, perseverance, and what it means to never give up.  

Philip is open to connecting to anyone who needs a shot of inspiration and can be reached at [email protected]

Buy Hanks’ book, My Story God's Glory: The Story of A Walking Miracle

On Amazon
Barnes and Noble
Apple Books
Google Play

Register as an organ donor today!

Donor Diaries Website
Donor Diaries on Facebook
Crowd Source for Life

Effective Altruism and Kidney Donation With Dylan Matthews

27m · Published 01 Mar 09:00

Do you ever stop to think about the effectiveness of the time and attention you put towards making a difference?   We all have the power to make the world a better place, but what could be possible if we all put more thought into maximizing our personal and financial resources?

Welcome to the world of Effective Altruism (EA) with non-directed kidney donor Dylan Matthews, a senior correspondent from Vox’s section Future Perfect.  Future Perfect reports on people and institutions trying to do the most good for the world they can.  Kidney donation is an unusually good way of help somebody, such that a given amount of effort goes an unusually long way.  And that’s what Effective Altruism is all about. 

In this episode, Dylan walks us through the EA Movement, and discusses how many people in the EA Community are kidney donors.  Come check out the EA Community with us and take a look at the practical thinking that supports living kidney donation as an effective way to truly make a difference.

Show Notes

Future Perfect
Givewell
Giving What You Can Pledge
Animal Charity Evaluators
The Kindest Cut in the New Yorker
Alexander Berger, 80,000 Hours
Josh Morrison
Waitlist Zero
Community Tax Aid
VITA
Center for Effective Altruism

Donor Diaries Website
Donor Diaries on Facebook
Crowd Source for Life

Altruists and Psychopaths with Abby Marsh

34m · Published 01 Feb 06:00

Have you ever wondered why some people have a powerful drive to donate a kidney or liver to a stranger, while others would never consider such a thing?

Professor Abigail Marsh has spent over a decade answering this question through studies on topics such as altruism, empathy, and the depths of human nature.  She answers complex questions such as:  How do we understand what others think and feel? What drives us to help other people? What prevents us from harming them

Abby’s Laboratory on Social & Affective Neuroscience is located at Georgetown University.   Her lab’s research includes behavioral and brain imaging investigations of human social behaviors ranging from extraordinary altruism to serious conduct problems in children, adolescents, and adults.  She is also author of the book, The Fear Factor, which examines how one emotion (fear), connects altruists, psychopaths, and everyone in between. 

Come take a tour of your brain with Abby Marsh and Laurie Lee, and explore the extremes of human generosity and the mechanisms underlying our capacity for empathy and ability to identify fear.

Showlinks:
Prof. Abigail Marsh’s Website
The Fear Factor
Abigail Marsh’s Ted Talk
Publications
Abigail Marsh on 60 Minutes
National Kidney Donation Organization

 

Donor Diaries Website
Donor Diaries on Facebook
Crowd Source for Life

Donor Disincentives, with Martha Gershun

29m · Published 05 Jan 04:00

In 2018 Martha donated a kidney to a woman she read about in the newspaper. She co-authored a book, Kidney to Share, published by Cornell University Press, about that experience and has given presentations at more than 35 transplant clinics, medical schools, and bioethics centers on her experience as a living kidney donor. 

In today’s episode, we discuss donor disincentives- the factors that can make it difficult for somebody to donate a kidney, even though they may really want to.  Martha breaks these disincentives into 3 categories: logistics, psychosocial and financial.  The top 3 disincentives facing donors are the cost of travel and lodging associated with donation, loss of income while recovering from surgery, and cost of home and/or dependent care during the donor’s recovery.  

Martha speaks candidly about her donation experience and how some of these disincentives made it difficult to donate a kidney.  She also discusses how the disincentives she experienced may disproportionately affect a donor with a different background than her. 

About Martha:
Martha Gershun is a nonprofit consultant, writer, and community volunteer with over 40 years of leadership experience in Fortune 500 corporations, start-up ventures, and non-profit organizations.  Gershun graduated with a B.A. cum laude from Harvard University and holds an M.B.A. with first year honors from the Harvard Business School, where she studied marketing, service operations, and customer experience.  She earned a graduate diploma in Economics from the University of Stirling, Scotland, where she was a Rotary International Fellow. 

References
Removing Disincentives to Kidney Donation
Kidney to Share
Martha Gershun

Donor Diaries Website
Donor Diaries on Facebook
Crowd Source for Life

Donor Diaries has 25 episodes in total of non- explicit content. Total playtime is 12:30:19. The language of the podcast is English. This podcast has been added on November 27th 2022. It might contain more episodes than the ones shown here. It was last updated on April 24th, 2024 04:44.

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