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Friday, March 30, 2012

Live Donor Donation: Kidney donated by Rabbi Chaim Soloveichik

I am proud to be friends with some of the family of the late Rabbi Ahron Soloveichik.
Rabbi Ahron Soloveichik was renowned for his kindness and sensitivity towards all human beings...especially towards people who in reality had problems or people who were just considered by society as lowly, poor, ill, downtrodden, handicapped, unusual, or just plain different.
To give only a very small vignette about his extreme righteousness and piety, a mentally disturbed woman once pushed Rabbi Soloveichik onto the NY Subway tracks in front of an oncoming train. Rabbi Soloveichik jumped out of the way and saved himself. But the story goes on. The disturbed woman fell onto the tracks as she was pushing Rabbi Soloveichik in front of the train. She was unable to get herself away from the oncoming train under her own power so Rabbi Soloveichik risked his life and also pulled this women who had just try to kill him to safety.
With such an illustrious lineage, I am not that surprised that Rabbi Chaim Soloveichik of Ramat Beit Shemesh,Israel, who is the youngest child of Rabbi Ahron Solloveichik, made an altruistically donated one of his kidneys to a women in need of a kidney a few weeks ago. A short article about it is found here.

I hope Rabbi Soloveichik and the women are both feeling well.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Organ Transplant Policy: Goal

This equation should guide and be the goal of all people who research access to transplantation regarding ESRD/kidney failure:

Supply of Kidneys Available for Transplantation = Demand for Kidneys Needed for Transplantation


Other Considerations:
1. Goal: All organs should be obtained in an ethical manner.
Operationalization: ??? Work on moral and legal issues. ???
2. Goal: Medicare should provide coverage for kidney transplants in the most cost effective manner possible.
Operationalization: All changes should be budget neutral (or even create savings) for Medicare's expenditures on ESRD treatment.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Man Survived 39 Years on Dialysis: A Call to Action

Dr. Robert Rigolosi reminisces about his patient Ed Strudwick who lived for 39 years on dialysis. And Dr. Rigolosi was Ed's physician for all 39 years that he was on dialysis. Read Dr. Rigolosi's thoughts about his patient here.

Let Ed Strudwick's great example of living 39 years on dialysis give hope to the ESRD community that dialysis is not a death sentence, but rather it can be a life giving process which enables people to live long and productive lives!

Researchers (and ESRD patients themselves) should study and analyze dialysis centers and physicians whose patients are on the far side of the bell curve to try to figure out what increases life expectancy among these ESRD patients so that best practices can then be shared among the general ESRD population so that all people can benefit from what these physicians and dialysis centers are doing to elongate the lives of their patients.

Here is a very interesting excerpt from the article regarding longevity of patients on dialysis in Dr. Rigolosi's own words:

"Remind your dialysis patients that compliance is key. Ed's longevity was due to his full compliance with diet, medicine, scheduling, and follow-up. If you have a compliant patient like this, you can expect long-term survival."

"We have about 200 patients on dialysis in our center, and I would guess that 10% or 15% of them have been on dialysis for more than 35 years. We may have another 10% that have been on 20 to 30 years.[italics added] Patients do best when they embrace their new disease-driven lifestyle and accept what they have to do. Be sure they understand that they can't be too careful."

And it is important to keep in mind that according to the US Renal Data System 2011 Report, that 5 year survival probability rate in 2004 for people on hemodialysis was only 34%!