Writing to Your Donor's Family.

Posted by JK @contentandwell, Aug 2, 2018

Have any of you who have had a transplant, written to the donor's family and received a letter back, and have any of you met the family or set up a time to meet?

Prior to being discharged from the hospital following my transplant, I was encouraged to write to the donor’s family if and when it felt right. I believe this is typical of all transplant centers. The decision to write is a deeply personal one. Recipients are encouraged to wait a while because the initial grief can be so overwhelming for the donor's family.

The UNOS guidelines are these:
https://unos.org/donation/connecting-donors-and-recipients/

I waited three or four months before writing what I think was a very gracious letter, and heard back from the parents of the donor in April -- a little more than a year after I had written I had wondered slightly about the donor, primarily the gender (I really did not want to be any more intrusive than that), but my transplant surgeon was reluctant to divulge even that. The letter I received from the parents gave much information, including their full names. I think my letter was well received by them, they sounded very pleased with it. Hearing the details of the donor was even more heart-wrenching than just knowing that a family somewhere was grieving their loss while I was celebrating my survival. I now feel a sense of mourning also. I can only imagine what they must be going through. A loss of a young adult child is something I don't think a person ever gets over. I think of them and pray for them daily.

I am still composing a letter back to them, trying to be very careful of exactly what I express. It never occurred to me that a letter from the donor family would make me so sad. I of course do not want to express that to them, just my empathy and compassion. I will not be surprised if at some point they want to meet. If so, that will be very difficult for me, I tend to get emotional.

I am very interested in hearing if others have received letters back, if they have met the donor's family, and if so how that went. It's obviously a very sensitive area.

Thanks. JK

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Transplants Support Group.

@contentandwell

@rosemarya actually now that I think about it, I think it’s a gathering just for transplant recipients. It would be really great if donor families were invited also but from what I’ve seen from my surgeon, MGH protects the donor family zealously so they would probably hesitate to get us ALL together.
JK

Jump to this post

@rosemarya. I suspect that this is sort of like a “social”, there are some refreshments served. I am curious and looking forward to attending.
JK

REPLY
@gaylea1

@contentandwell @rosemary...for some reason I would want to know the recipient if I had to donate a loved ones organ. Maybe out of curiosity but also to know they are doing well and that it was what my loved one wanted.

Jump to this post

@rosemary Our correspondence goes through "New England Donor Services". I expect that different regions do have different organizations coordinating the correspondence, and that the guidelines are very much the same.
I would imagine that more organs are used from adult donors, there are fewer children needing organs.
It really is such a miracle that they are able to do this, how fortunate we are to be living in these times. I really do hope that the country, or more and more states, choose to make the decision on organ donation an "opt out" one. I just feel so certain that the majority of people who have not gotten listed do not because they just don't think it applies to them, or they don't through procrastination.
Another area where donors are needed is bone marrow. I understand that is a bit painful for the donor but worthwhile. I have friends who have signed up for that also.
JK

REPLY
@gaylea1

@contentandwell @rosemary...for some reason I would want to know the recipient if I had to donate a loved ones organ. Maybe out of curiosity but also to know they are doing well and that it was what my loved one wanted.

Jump to this post

@contentedandwell - yes, sure hoping the "opt out" idea is put in place, like we have heard it is in other countries. I have been listed as a donor on my driver's license for many decades. My husband has been also, and never thought he would be needing an organ. The advancements continue in organ transplant surgery, hooray!

REPLY
@gaylea1

@contentandwell @rosemary...for some reason I would want to know the recipient if I had to donate a loved ones organ. Maybe out of curiosity but also to know they are doing well and that it was what my loved one wanted.

Jump to this post

@gingerw Hooray is right. When I was first listed, what I read made it sound as if live donors were at more risk than I have read they are now so hopefully that will encourage more people to be living donors also. Back then I even read that some insurance plans drop people if they have been an organ donor!
JK

REPLY

I have reached out to my donor family and have not heard back from them yet. I think about, and pray for, my donor and family everyday. My heart/liver transplant was on 7/4/2017. I wrote my letter to the donor family in February 2018. My physical health is great, I just need to learn to deal with the mental aspect.

REPLY
@chetfreeman

I have reached out to my donor family and have not heard back from them yet. I think about, and pray for, my donor and family everyday. My heart/liver transplant was on 7/4/2017. I wrote my letter to the donor family in February 2018. My physical health is great, I just need to learn to deal with the mental aspect.

Jump to this post

Count your blessing you are in good health. It may be to painful for the donar family to handle the list of a loved one.

REPLY
@chetfreeman

I have reached out to my donor family and have not heard back from them yet. I think about, and pray for, my donor and family everyday. My heart/liver transplant was on 7/4/2017. I wrote my letter to the donor family in February 2018. My physical health is great, I just need to learn to deal with the mental aspect.

Jump to this post

Welcome to Connect, @chetfreeman. Good for you for writing to your donor's family. I think the gratitude that recipients feel can only truly be understood by recipients themselves. I am not a transplant recipient so I can only try to understand how you must grapple with the emotional and mental side of receiving life at the loss of another. Several transplant recipient members have written about this on Connect. I think it was @contentandwell and/or @rosemarya who shared about this either here or in another discussion.

I applaud that you respect the gift of life and enjoy good physical health and strive to receive the gift graciously with mental wellbeing as well. I assume that it's a process.

Like @wwndy said, it may still be too painful for the family to write back to you. Perhaps they need more time. @contentandwell waited for over a year for a response. Maybe they'll never be able to write, but that doesn't mean that your letter wasn't appreciated. I bet they cherish the thought that their loved one gave life. I encourage to read @dawn_giacabazi's story about how giving the gift of life in time of sudden and unimaginable tragedy was a source of solace for her and her family.

* Living Without You - My Brother's Gift of Life https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/living-without-you/

Chet, what part of the mental aspect do you struggle with the most?

REPLY
@colleenyoung

Welcome to Connect, @chetfreeman. Good for you for writing to your donor's family. I think the gratitude that recipients feel can only truly be understood by recipients themselves. I am not a transplant recipient so I can only try to understand how you must grapple with the emotional and mental side of receiving life at the loss of another. Several transplant recipient members have written about this on Connect. I think it was @contentandwell and/or @rosemarya who shared about this either here or in another discussion.

I applaud that you respect the gift of life and enjoy good physical health and strive to receive the gift graciously with mental wellbeing as well. I assume that it's a process.

Like @wwndy said, it may still be too painful for the family to write back to you. Perhaps they need more time. @contentandwell waited for over a year for a response. Maybe they'll never be able to write, but that doesn't mean that your letter wasn't appreciated. I bet they cherish the thought that their loved one gave life. I encourage to read @dawn_giacabazi's story about how giving the gift of life in time of sudden and unimaginable tragedy was a source of solace for her and her family.

* Living Without You - My Brother's Gift of Life https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/living-without-you/

Chet, what part of the mental aspect do you struggle with the most?

Jump to this post

@colleenyoung @chetfreeman Congratulations on your gift of life. I know that receiving such a gift is can be overwhelming not only for the recipient, but for the donors. It changes the lives of everyone involved. Thinking of how they make such a gracious decision in the time of grief has never failed to humble me. My husband received his kidney October 1, 2016. Like you, he has written a letter to the donor's family, but we have not heard back. We understand that we may never hear from them, but we are comforted in the fact that we did reach out to express our gratitude. That's all we can do. A response from them would be wonderful, but we also understand that they may not be ready (now or ever) to share with us. We try to honor the gift given to us by charity work that we do, knowing that without the transplant he would not be able to do this now.
Ginger

REPLY
@colleenyoung

Welcome to Connect, @chetfreeman. Good for you for writing to your donor's family. I think the gratitude that recipients feel can only truly be understood by recipients themselves. I am not a transplant recipient so I can only try to understand how you must grapple with the emotional and mental side of receiving life at the loss of another. Several transplant recipient members have written about this on Connect. I think it was @contentandwell and/or @rosemarya who shared about this either here or in another discussion.

I applaud that you respect the gift of life and enjoy good physical health and strive to receive the gift graciously with mental wellbeing as well. I assume that it's a process.

Like @wwndy said, it may still be too painful for the family to write back to you. Perhaps they need more time. @contentandwell waited for over a year for a response. Maybe they'll never be able to write, but that doesn't mean that your letter wasn't appreciated. I bet they cherish the thought that their loved one gave life. I encourage to read @dawn_giacabazi's story about how giving the gift of life in time of sudden and unimaginable tragedy was a source of solace for her and her family.

* Living Without You - My Brother's Gift of Life https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/living-without-you/

Chet, what part of the mental aspect do you struggle with the most?

Jump to this post

Thank you Colleen for your kind words.

REPLY

Who has contacted their donors family to thank them? Opinions
I received a lung Transplant in 2005 and felt bad I haven’t contacted my donors family to thank them. I didn’t have the right words to tell them thanks, I don’t know what I would even say now.
A bad time in their lives turned out to be a lifesaver for me. Is it too late?

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.