Transplant Evaluation - What to expect
We received a call today from Mayo-Jax saying our referral had been approved for transplant evaluation and to schedule an appointment. We were told to expect to say up to 3 weeks for testing every day, the entire day. We were not expecting that long of an evaluation and told them we would call back tomorrow after we looked into travel/lodging arrangements. We will plan to stay the entire 3 weeks but just wondering what the general time frame it was for most people. Did it usually take the entire three weeks? And can someone give me an idea of the battery of tests/evaluations that will be included. Thanks!
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@rosemarya what a beautiful privilege to be able to donate after being a recipient
@mauraacro That is indeed an interesting difference worthy of research. Especially since I really wanted to know the recipient & now I'm doubting whether it truly matters.
In that case does it mean liver transplants are more complicated than say kidney transplants? Surely it should aid in healing for all transplants. Theory: The bond is encouraging because both parties are a support system
@jeanne5009 Thanks for updating. As a perspective donor I give more consideration to literal experience than to generalization.
@dorifg You do not need to answer if it makes you feel uncomfortable. My grandmother always told me curiosity killed the cat yet here I am curious as to whether your kidney failed from new causes or the cause of your original kidney failure?
I don’t know how it works with a living donor. My transplant was with a deceased donor. I wrote my letter to the family on my 1 year anniversary but have not heard from them. I’m almost at my 2 year mark. I would really like to hear From them.
@bamagirlgina Curious again. Why are you involved at Mayo Clinic in 2 states? I'm prepared to do all my tests & transplant surgery at Mayo - Jax. It seems like a lot for one location much more for 2 that are so far apart.
@bamagirlgina Something on wheels to carry necessary items for the journey is a great idea. Thanks for the tip
I am so happy to have the recipient (and her family) in my life but I think for both of us, we got lucky that we have found much in common. On paper, we seem almost opposite. We could have both gone our separate ways after the surgery and that would have been fine with me but we talk often and are planning a vacation together this summer.
In my case, it was a new situation for the Mayo staff that I had a directed donor yet didn't know her. With the popularity of social media, I think (hope) this will become more common. I wasn't actively looking for someone to donate to but saw a post of her daughter's and it was exactly the right time for me.
I think @onecentwalsh can tell you more about how a non directed donor works with getting to meet the recipient. I know there are privacy laws on both ends.
@2011panc My goodness what a great post. I'm looking forward to being a kidney donor & found this to be very informative. It is imperative to have a good understanding of the full process not just one aspect (donor, recipient, transplant team) to alleviate stress which makes everything work much more smoothly