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UC Divest, SJP Encampment

Child’s gift inspires hundreds

By Eileen Chen

Oct. 7, 2004 9:00 p.m.

Shot and killed at the age of seven while on a family vacation
in Italy in 1994, Nicholas Green is remembered by local Italians as
the boy whose death brought them life. After his death,
Green’s parents donated his organs to Italian locals waiting
for transplants.

To commemorate the 10th anniversary of Green’s death and
his “Famed Gift of Life,” UCLA Transplant Services and
OneLegacy ““ an organ donor and transplant network ““
honored the Green family last week at the UCLA Medical Center for
donating their son’s organs and tissues. The California
couple now devotes their time to encouraging families to donate the
organs and tissues of their lost loved ones.

“The substance of the event was to acknowledge the Greens
and their gift of life,” said UCLA alumnus Bryan Stewart,
spokesperson for OneLegacy.

The Bell Memorial in Bodega Bay, in northern California, stands
to acknowledge the boy who made the organ donations possible. When
the wind blows from the coast through the bay, the 140 bells of the
memorial ring in remembrance of Green. When Italy heard of the
Greens’ act of altruism in the wake of their tragic loss,
families and bell factories sent bells to the Greens in tribute,
according to NicholasGreen.org. Now those bells hang and ring
together in the Bell Memorial as a “symbol of the
preciousness and fragility of young life,” Nicholas’
father Reg Green said.

UCLA Transplant Services and OneLegacy also presented a bell at
the medical center ceremony that commemorated Green. The bell was
rung to remind the Greens of the Bell Memorial they had to leave
behind in their move to La Cañada.

Green’s parents, Reg and Maggie, decided to donate their
son’s organs, tissues and corneas to the Italian hospital
immediately after Green was pronounced brain-dead. The highway
robbers who opened fire had thought the family’s rental car
was carrying jewelry, wrote Reg in “A Child’s Legacy of
Love”.

Before they returned to the hotel, the press had already heard
of the Greens’ decision to donate Green’s organs.
“It was a surprise how interested the Italians were about our
story and our decision,” Maggie said.

More than just being interested, the Italian people were
motivated. The Greens’ gift of life did not stop with just
Green’s organ donations, but continued on with a 300 percent
increase in organ donations and 400 percent increase in the signing
of donor cards in Italy, said Dr. Robert Ettenger, chief of staff
at the UCLA Medical Center.

This drastic increase in organ donations due to the
Greens’ decision is now known as “the Nicholas
effect.”

“The decision (to donate),” Maggie said, “was
very simple for us, it could be more difficult for others.”
She never regrets the decision because as a result of the decision,
she sees that the transplant recipients are no longer sick and are
completely healthy.

Rafael Gardunos, a transplant recipient who received a heart in
June, no longer lives a life restrained by heart deformities. His
doctor, Juan Alejos, a member of the UCLA transplant team who spoke
at the commemoration, says Gardunos has recovered very well after a
complicated surgery and only now is he able to do what regular
18-year-olds do.

“He was previously kept on a heart device which allowed
him to walk, but the quality of his life was not normal.”

The regular wait for a heart is three years, Alejos explained,
and sometimes, patients die waiting for a transplant. The picture
is just as grim for kidney donations. “There are around
10,000 kidney donors, while there are 70,000 to 80,000 patients
waiting for a kidney transplant,” Ettenger added.

American doctors and patients waiting for organ transplants are
hoping that stories like the Greens’ will have the same
“Nicholas effect” here as it did in Italy.

“We could double and triple donations and still not take
care of the people we need to help. The sad thing is that the
technology is here to help so many people, and where we are stymied
is at the bottleneck of organ donations,” Ettenger added.

Underlying the bottleneck of organ donations are two common
misconceptions that deter individuals from becoming organ donors.
Most people believe there is a long process involved in expressing
their intent to become an organ donor after death. And doctors say
that many individuals forego signing the organ donor card because
they fear receiving lower quality health care in a time of medical
emergency.

But individuals over 18 can simply state their intent to donate
their organs on their drivers’ licenses or print and fill out
a organ donor card, according to the U.S. Health and Human Services
Web site, while minors need parental or guardian consent. Perhaps
the most difficult and important part of becoming an organ donor is
discussing the decision with family and loved ones, the site
states. More importantly, signing an organ donor card does not
affect the health care that will be given. Every attempt will be
made to save the donor’s life, and it is only after death and
the family’s consent is obtained that a transplant team is
contacted, according to the Health and Human Services Web site.

The number of organs donated and transplanted each year is well
under the number of patients placed on the waiting list. And most
patients cannot afford to wait. According to OneLegacy.org,
approximately 17 people die each day while waiting for a
life-saving organ.

The Greens are strengthened by their son’s death and pass
along their perspective of saving lives to families all around the
world, Stewart said. Reg is now committed to traveling around the
United States, giving speeches and interviews to increase organ
donations.

It may be difficult for families to cope with the loss and to
donate a loved one’s organs, but to Maggie, the decision was
simple: “I wanted to spare families from dealing with the
same loss of a loved one that I had to undergo.”

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Eileen Chen
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