News Columnists / Michael Platt
Father-daughter well matchedBy Michael Platt, Calgary Sun
Last Updated: June 19, 2010 11:52pm
Stephanie Stewart will never see the gift she’s giving her father this week — she only hopes he sees the benefit of what may be the greatest present a daughter can give her dad.
On June 23, just after Father’s Day, Stephanie is scheduled to join her 61-year-old dad Brian in a Calgary operating room, where anesthesiologists will place both patients in a deep sleep.
Surgeons will then remove a kidney from the 30-year-old woman and transplant it in the father, who lost the use of his blood-filtering organs to diabetes.
When the dad and daughter awake after the five-hour dual operation, they’ll probably both feel worse for wear — but Stephanie knows her heart, at least, will never feel better.
“I’m doing it because I want to see him back like he was before, able to do the things he likes to do,” said Stephanie.
“He used to umpire softball, he used to curl a lot and travel with my mom — and I’d like to see him to feel well enough to go and see my niece and nephew play hockey, without being run down and tired.
“I just want to give him a little bit of his life back.”
In a perfect world, it’d be a perfectly simple decision — but like any gift worth giving, a kidney for her dad meant significant sacrifice for Stephanie.
A book publisher now living in Toronto, Stephanie laboured over the idea of giving her father the kidney he needs to get off dialysis, but her doubt wasn’t out of fear or any concern over having one kidney left.
She wondered if she had the willpower to save her dad.
To give up a 150-gram internal organ, Stephanie would first have to shed more than a quarter of her own body weight: As a heavier woman, she didn’t have a low enough body mass index to qualify as a donor.
She knew the day her dad would need a new organ would come as long as six years ago, when Brian started seriously struggling with his life-long diabetes.
As her dad grew more ill and the need for a kidney donor reached a critical stage, Stephanie decided to change her life, to change her father’s.
“It took me a good 3 1/2 years to decide to go through with the donation because I had to lose a significant amount of weight to do it,” Stephanie said.
“It was last year when I was back for Christmas, I finally decided — when I called to say I was ready to donate, they said, ‘we closed your file, because you said nothing for so long.’ ”
They confirmed there was still an obstacle with Stephanie’s weight: At 217 lbs., donation was considered too dangerous, with too many potential complications.
And so, the now-determined daughter hit the gym.
“I walked down the street, reactivated my gym membership and got a personal trainer and I lost 65 pounds,” she said.
The next stage for Stephanie was a battery of tests, to determine if she was compatible.
Stephanie is adopted, but with kidneys, being genetic kin only lowers the chance of rejection and the need for immunosuppressive drugs.
What’s more important is blood type and overall health of the donor — and Stephanie was given the green light to give away her kidney.
And so her decision to donate was suddenly more than a mission, it was a reality.
Days away from her date with the scalpel, she admits she is nervous, but not about losing the kidney.
“It’s not the kidney, it’s the surgery‚ I’m chicken about things like that,” said Stephanie.
“I’m nervous about it, because I’ve never had surgery before.”
There’s been a few emotional moments, she confesses — “a meltdown and some tears” — but she has no doubts about her gift to her dad.
“He’s my dad and these are my parents and I would do anything I can for them — they raised me,” said Stephanie.
“To me, it’s a no brainer.”
And she’s right — this is clearly a gift straight from her heart.
michael.platt@sunmedia.ca
http://www.calgarysun.com/news/columnists/michael_platt/2010/06/20/14452851.html