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Small Bowel Transplant Program: Testimonials
As one of the most successful multi-organ transplant centers in the world, The Nebraska Medical Center attracts patients from across the United States and around the world. Our programs consistently achieve better outcomes and perform more successful transplants than most programs in the nation. Patients are treated with the utmost respect and attention. Patients continue to choose The Nebraska Medical Center Transplant Program not only because of our world-class reputation, but because of the professional and personalized care they receive by our staff. The following testimonials provide you some insight into the personal satisfaction felt by our patients when they leave The Nebraska Medical Center.

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“There were a lot of tense moments during the time she was hospitalized but Shelby was very well cared for by a lot of very nice people. The medical center provided us with great support, but what helped us the most was being able to communicate with other families in the same situation as we were in. We were able to provide each other support and helped each other through the tough times. Today, Shelby’s health is wonderful, we just don’t have any problems.”

Candy, mother of Shelby
Hometown: Kansas
Shelby received her transplant in October 1993 at the age of 18 months.


In Their Own Words: Stories of Transplant Recipients

The following interviews were conducted in June, 2004 at The Nebraska Medical Center. Some interviewees were at the hospital for their annual checkups, some were just out of surgery and others are employees of the Medical Center.

Renee Ziemba
Mother of baby Taylor Ziemba
Taylor received a liver-small bowel transplant, June 2004
Jackson, Michigan residents

Taylor ended up in the Nebraska Medical Center’s Pediatric Intensive Care unit after a long bout with a very hard-to-diagnose illness. It took eight weeks for doctors in Michigan to determine that Taylor had Microvillous Inclusion Disease, which means her small intestine could not absorb any nutrients. As a result, Taylor, who was just a few months old at the time, had to be fed intravenously. Tragically, her IV nutrition wound up damaging her liver and she went into liver failure.

My husband and I immediately searched the Internet for medical centers that do pediatric small intestine transplants. The Nebraska Medical Center’s stats for survival were really good and it is listed as one of the number one transplant centers in the world, so we brought Taylor here in April to be evaluated. She was so sick they kept her here and two months later, on June 2, she had a liver-small intestine transplant. So far she’s doing well—in the first week she’s been back on the breathing machine, but we expect her to be taken off that shortly.

Since we’re from Jackson, Michigan, we’ve been staying at the Lied Transplant Center, which is connected to the hospital. We can come to see Taylor any time day or night. And since we will be here for at least six months as Taylor recovers, it is wonderful to have this access.

There really is not enough known about organ transplant in children. As a parent, it’s certainly not something you ever want to consider—something terrible happening to your child. But I think if you are aware of stories like Taylor’s beforehand, and something tragic does happen, you might be inclined to make the decision to donate. As a mother who has waited for her child to get an organ, I can tell you that it was a very anxious time. They told us there was only a 50-50 chance that an organ would come available for Taylor. Without this transplant, Taylor would have died.

And now she has a second chance to live a long life with good quality. It is terrible that a tragedy must occur for someone else to enable this life-saving surgery, but what I would say to our donor family is that their child will always be a part of Taylor and live on in her. There are no words to express my gratitude for this gift.

 


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